Extrusion-based additive manufacturing of zinc bone scaffolds

Journal Article (2026)
Author(s)

Keyu Chen (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

Jiahui Dong (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

Niko Eka Putra (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

Jinlai Li (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

Maria Klimopoulou (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

Marius A. Leeflang (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

Lidy Elena Fratila-Apachitei (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

Jie Zhou (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

Amir A. Zadpoor (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

Research Group
Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2026.01.039
More Info
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Publication Year
2026
Language
English
Research Group
Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics
Volume number
213
Pages (from-to)
737-756
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Abstract

Zinc (Zn) has emerged as a promising biodegradable metal for bone tissue engineering, yet fabricating porous scaffolds via laser-based additive manufacturing (AM) remains challenging due to Zn evaporation. This study presents the successful fabrication of porous Zn scaffolds via extrusion-based AM through systematic ink formulation and sintering optimization. Printability was optimized through rheological analysis of 50–56 vol % Zn-loaded inks, while sintering conditions were refined within a precise temperature window. SEM and micro-CT characterized sintering quality and quantified pore defects. Optimal scaffolds, printed with 53 vol % ink and sintered at 415 °C for 5 h, achieved 40 ± 3% absolute porosity with minimal evaporation, attributed to a hybrid solid-liquid phase sintering mechanism. The scaffolds exhibited trabecular bone-matching mechanical properties with compressive yield strength of 16.1 ± 1.3 MPa and elastic modulus of 1.4 ± 0.1 GPa. In vitro biodegradation in r-SBF showed a corrosion rate of 0.03 ± 0.01 mm/year after 28 days, with biodegradation products including ZnO, Ca₃(PO₄)₂, and Zn-phosphate/chloride hydrates. Electrochemical tests demonstrated increasing polarization resistance (21.1 ± 3.8 kΩ·cm²) and passivation behavior. Indirect cytocompatibility assays showed > 90% metabolic activity for MC3T3-E1 cells in ≤ 50% Zn extracts, while direct seeding confirmed cell adhesion. These results establish extrusion-based AM as a viable route for fabricating Zn scaffolds with tailored porosity, controlled biodegradation, bone-like properties, and acceptable cytocompatibility, advancing the development of Zn-based biodegradable implants. Statement of significance Although laser-based additive manufacturing of pure zinc and its alloys is becoming increasingly mature, its inherent drawbacks, such as evaporation-driven composition loss and melt-pool instabilities, remain non-negligible and underscore the need to develop and apply alternative AM strategies for Zn-based bone scaffolds. We presented an extrusion-based route to fabricate porous Zn bone scaffolds and establish an end-to-end workflow spanning ink formulation, debinding, sintering, and multi-scale characterization. By tailoring the binder system and defining a robust thermal window, we achieved high-fidelity architectures with densified struts. The resulting scaffolds displayed bone-mimicking mechanical behavior together with predictable in-vitro degradation and cytocompatibility. Our work positions extrusion-based 3D printing as a practical manufacturing platform for Zn-based biodegradable bone substitutes.