| The
goal of my project is to quantify and measure the adhesion strength
of biological cells to various types of substrates such as titanium,
cobalt chromium, and polystyrene. Cellular adhesion strength is
an important factor in many biomedical engineering applications,
such orthopedic implants design, dental and prosthodontics manufacturing,
and also in tissue engineering applications to name a few.
Current methods used to measure cell adhesion strength include radial
flow techniques, micro-cantilever beam measurements, and jet impingement
based methods, however, results derived from these methods have
been inconsistent.
The advantage of the Laser
Spallation Technique (LST) (see image below) used in our lab
is that interfacial stress measurements can be quantified one-dimensionally,
unlike existing techniques which must consider multi-axial stress-state.
Also, cellular interface strength can be determined without the
need to consider inexact variables such as Young’s modulus,
Shear modulus, etc., which other methods are dependent upon.

Laser Spallation Technique for measuring
cellular interface strength. 1) Laser pulse passes through convex
lens and enters disk holder with constraining material (water in
this case) and hits the backside of titanium disk, 2) nanosecond
stress-wave in substrate is formed, 3) cell grow on opposite face
are ejected.
Currently, our research group is
seeking to measure interface strengths between chondrocytes and
titanium, fibroblast and polystyrene, and bone tissue and several
other kinds of substrates. This project is in collaboration with
Prof. Ben
Wu’s lab in Biomedical Engineering IDP, Prof. Takahiro
Ogawa’s lab in the Weintraub
center for reconstructive biotechnology, and Prof.
Theodore Hahn’s lab in the VA hospital research center. |