Abstract
Desktop LCD (MSLA; masked stereolithography) vat photopolymerization offers a globally accessible route for fabricating high-definition microfluidic and biointerface devices. Practical adoption, however, is often constrained by limited optical confinement in commodity water-washable resins and by the scarcity of mechanically compliant, cell-compatible printable formulations for microstructured biological interfaces. This thesis demonstrates an ink/formulation-first strategy to (i) improve voxel confinement in commercial clear resins using accessible photoabsorbers and (ii) engineer a compliant PEGDA–GelMA hydrogel formulation while preserving print fidelity in enclosed and high-aspect-ratio microfeatures.
To improve microfluidic print resolution, candidate absorbers were screened by UV–Vis spectroscopy and quantified using Jacob’s working-curve analysis (penetration depth, Dp, and critical dose, Ec) under practical exposure conditions. These tuned resin–absorber combinations enabled reproducible fabrication of embedded circular microchannels with radii down to ~80 µm (e.g., 1.0% w/v curcumin in Anycubic resin) and ~100–140 µm across multiple resin systems (including lower-loading quinoline yellow conditions). Device-level demonstrations included an embedded micromixer printed at ~80% scale, featuring enclosed channels of ~248 × 248 µm² merging into ~720 × 720 µm², and an internal pillar (~162 × 244 µm) spanning the mixing chamber; dye-based visualization showed progressive folding and recombination of streams along the mixer path. A membrane microvalve geometry was also printed, incorporating a ~32 µm thick membrane (~1.4 mm diameter) positioned ~80 µm above a ~400 µm valve seat, with enclosed flow/control conduits retained after post-processing.
Additionally, a flexible, biocompatible PEGDA–GelMA ink was developed to remain printable on an LCD platform while providing mechanically compliant microstructures for contractility interfacing, where cell contractility is intended to be quantified through the measurable deformation or displacement of mechanically responsive features (e.g., pillars) under physiologically relevant forces. A baseline PEGDA–GelMA resin was then systematically softened via formulation-level tuning of crosslink density while preserving print fidelity of confined cavities and embedded micropillar arrays; optical/brightfield microscopy confirmed upright pillars with no gross evidence of collapse or fusion (150%-scaled verification; mean column width 152 µm). Mechanical characterization by unconfined compression demonstrated a substantial stiffness reduction from the MPa range (17.6–27.8 MPa) to the kPa range (0.0251 MPa ≈ 25.1 kPa), supporting the design goal of producing deformable microfeatures while maintaining structural stability. Finally, screening-level cytocompatibility (NIH/3T3 fibroblasts) following a multi-day PBS leaching workflow showed cell attachment and spread morphology, supporting progression to future cell application.
Overall, these results establish a practical, low-cost workflow for calibrating commercial resins and engineering printable hydrogels to achieve enclosed microfluidics and mechanically relevant microstructures on desktop LCD printers, enabling substantial performance gains through formulation and exposure design rather than hardware upgrades.
School
School of Sciences and Engineering
Department
Nanotechnology Program
Degree Name
MS in Nanotechnology
Graduation Date
Spring 6-30-2026
Submission Date
2-11-2026
First Advisor
Hassan Azzazy
Second Advisor
David Juncker
Third Advisor
Allen Ehrlicher
Committee Member 1
Nermeen A. Elkasabgy
Committee Member 2
Khalil Elkhodary
Committee Member 3
Hatem Tallima
Extent
119p.
Document Type
Master's Thesis
Institutional Review Board (IRB) Approval
Not necessary for this item
Disclosure of AI Use
Thesis editing and/or reviewing
Recommended Citation
APA Citation
Elfarargy, R. G.
(2026).Affordable High-Resolution LCD 3D Printing via Advanced Ink Formulation for Conventional and Biocompatible Microfluidic Devices [Master's Thesis, the American University in Cairo]. AUC Knowledge Fountain.
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2739
MLA Citation
Elfarargy, Reham Gamal. Affordable High-Resolution LCD 3D Printing via Advanced Ink Formulation for Conventional and Biocompatible Microfluidic Devices. 2026. American University in Cairo, Master's Thesis. AUC Knowledge Fountain.
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2739
Included in
Biomedical Engineering and Bioengineering Commons, Engineering Science and Materials Commons, Materials Science and Engineering Commons, Nanoscience and Nanotechnology Commons
