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Biocompatible piezoelectric lattice materials with ultrasound-regulated multimodal responses

MATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING R-REPORTS [2025]
Annan Chen, Jin Su, Muran Zhou, Mingpei Cang, Yinjin Li, Yunsong Shi, Zhen Zhang, Yangzhi Zhu, Bin Su, Yang Liu, Zuo-Guang Ye, Yusheng Shi, Jüergen Röedel, Huachen Cui, Haibo Zhang, Kun Zhou, Jian Lu, Chunze Yan
ABSTRACT

Piezoelectric biomaterials, capable of converting electrical energy to mechanical energy and vice versa, are desirable for implantable devices that can achieve biosensing, tissue regeneration, anti-infection, and tumor treatment. However, their low piezoelectricity, simple geometry, and monotonous functionality remain challenging towards practical applications. Here, we report the design and additive manufacturing of a series of biocompatible piezoelectric lattice materials with bone-mimicking designs and ultrasound-regulated electrical responses. Barium calcium zirconate titanate (BCZT) with a piezoelectric coefficient d 33 up to 580 pC/N was synthesized and used as the parent material of the lattices for additive manufacturing. The as-fabricated BCZT lattices have compressive strength comparable to native trabecular bones, making them promising candidates for implantation and in vivo activation. We show that the lattices allow on-demand activation of anti-tumor or osteogenic functions with programmable non-invasive ultrasound stimuli, both in vitro and in vivo . Our findings provide new insights and a widely applicable strategy for developing versatile, non-invasive, and regulatable biomedical devices via bio-mimicking designs and additive manufacturing.

MATERIALS

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