
From Additive Manufacturing to 3D/4D Printing 3
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Content
- Cover
- Half-Title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Foreword
- Preface
- Introduction
- PART 1. Programmable Smart/Intelligent Matter and 4D Printing
- Introduction to Part 1
- 1. Programmable Matter or Smart Matter, Stimulated Organization and 4D Printing
- 1.1. Introduction
- 1.2. Natural (spontaneous) self-organization
- 1.2.1. Nonlinearities
- 1.2.2. Achieving the desired form?
- 1.3. "Smart" matter
- 1.3.1. Active polymers: photochemical muscles
- 1.3.2. Physical alterations
- 1.3.3. Distortion of metal parts
- 1.3.4. Conclusion
- 1.4. A transition to 4D printing: swimming robots
- 1.5. 4D Printing
- 1.5.1. Automation and robots
- 1.5.2. Origami
- 1.5.3. Octobot
- 1.5.4. Massive objects
- 1.6. Conclusion
- 1.7. Bibliography
- PART 2. Live "Smart" Matter and (Bio-printing)
- Introduction to Part 2
- I.1. Introduction
- I.2. Background
- I.3. Bibliography
- 2. Bio-printing Technologies
- 2.1. Introduction
- 2.2. Tissue complexity
- 2.3. Bio-printing technologies
- 2.3.1. Cell preparation
- 2.3.2. Generic bio-printing technologies
- 2.3.3. Materials
- 2.3.4. Process-material couplings
- 2.3.5. Subsequent cell growth
- 2.4. Comment: 4D bio-printing
- 2.5. Other applications
- 2.5.1. Biological applications
- 2.5.2. Is it possible to feed ourselves thanks to bio-printing?
- 2.5.3. Bioluminescence and electronics
- 2.5.4. Bio-printed Bio-bots or "soft robots" produced by additive manufacturing
- 2.6. Conclusion
- 2.7. Appendix: 3D printing for biological applications
- 2.8. Bibliography
- 3. Some Examples of 3D Bio-printed Tissues
- 3.1. Introduction
- 3.2. Work on cartilage
- 3.2.1. General remarks on cartilage
- 3.2.2. Cartilaginous defects and treatments
- 3.2.3. Cartilage bio-printing
- 3.2.4. Primary results
- 3.3. Skin bio-printing
- 3.3.1. General remarks on skin
- 3.3.2. Bio-printing skin
- 3.3.3. Conclusion
- 3.4. Bone
- 3.4.1. General remarks on the composition of bone
- 3.4.2. Bone bio-printing
- 3.4.3. Conclusion
- 3.5. Bio-printing and cancer
- 3.5.1. Examples
- 3.5.2. Conclusion and perspectives
- 3.6. General Conclusion
- 3.7. Bibliography
- 4. Ethical Issues and Responsible Parties
- 4.1. Introduction
- 4.2. Reflection on the acceptance of bio-printing
- 4.2.1. Raw survey data
- 4.2.2. General discussion: whom to trust?
- 4.2.3. Preliminary conclusion
- 4.3. Ethics and bio-printing
- 4.3.1. Framing elements
- 4.3.2. Return on the concept of ethics
- 4.3.3. What can be foreseen?
- 4.3.4. Conclusion
- 4.4. Governing bio-printing research: mastering convergence
- 4.4.1. Return to 3D printing
- 4.4.2. Promises of NBIC convergence and bio-printing
- 4.4.3. Convergence
- 4.4.4. Comparisons
- 4.4.5. Epistemological questions
- 4.5. Conclusion
- 4.6. Bibliography
- 5. Questions of Epistemology and Modeling
- 5.1. Introduction
- 5.2. The PE approach (seen by a possible divergent, somewhat of an HE) [AND 16]
- 5.3. The HE approach
- 5.4. Complexity and bio-printing
- 5.4.1. Complexity?
- 5.4.2. Initial reflection for action
- 5.5. Return to complexity
- 5.5.1. Complexity and system approach
- 5.6. Bases of reflection on modeling
- 5.6.1. Shooting or Monte-Carlo methods
- 5.6.2. Analogy with David Bohm's works?
- 5.6.3. Cellular differentiation
- 5.6.4. Scale change(s)
- 5.6.5. Questions for realistic modeling
- 5.6.6. Provision of an operatory reference
- 5.6.7. Organizational methodology
- 5.7. Conclusion
- 5.8. Bibliography
- Conclusion
- Postface
- Index
- Other titles from iSTE in Systems and Industrial Engineering - Robotics
- EULA
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