Author/Authors :
Johnson, Ashley R. Merck & Co. - Inc - Kenilworth - NJ, USA , Procopio, Adam T. Merck & Co. - Inc - Kenilworth - NJ, USA
Abstract :
Microneedle patches are arrays of tiny needles that painlessly pierce the skin to deliver medication into
the body. Biocompatible microneedles are usually fabricated via molding of a master structure. Microfabrication
techniques used for fabricating these master structures are costly, time intensive, and require extensive expertise to
control the structure’s geometry of the structure, despite evidence that microneedle geometry is a key design
parameter. Here, a commercially available 3D printer is utilized, for the first time, to quickly and easily manufacture
microneedle masters.
Design/methodology/approach: Because commercially available 3D printers are not typically used for micron-scale
fabrication, the influence of three different sources of error- stair-stepping, aliasing, and light abberations- on the
resulting structure is investigated. A custom Matlab code is written to control the light intensity projected off of each
individual micromirror (through grayscale) at a given time. The effect of the layer height, the number of layers, and
grayscale on the sharpness, surface texture, and dimensional fidelity of the final structure is described.
Findings: The Autodesk Ember is successfully utilized to fabricate sharp microneedles with a tip radius of approximately
15 μm in less than 30 min per patch (as compared to weeks to months for existing approaches). Utilization of grayscale
improves surface texture and sharpness, and dimensional fidelity within ±5% of desired dimensions is achieved.
Originality/value: The described 3D printing technique enables investigators to accurately fabricate microneedles within
minutes at low cost. Rapid, iterative optimization of microneedle geometry through 3D printing will accelerate
microneedle research through improved understanding of the relationship between microneedle structure and function.
Keywords :
3D printing , Drug delivery , Microneedles , Sterolithography , Aliasing