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Sonicated inks and focused-ultrasound writing enable deep-penetration acoustic volumetric printing.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Kuang, X; Rong, Q; Belal, S; Wang, N; Vu, T; Herrera-Ruiz, A; Zhang, Z; Zhang, YS; Yao, J
Published in: Nature protocols
October 2025

Volumetric printing is an emerging additive manufacturing technique that builds 3D constructs with enhanced printing speed and surface quality by forgoing the stepwise ink renewal. Existing volumetric printing techniques almost exclusively rely on light energy to trigger photopolymerization in transparent inks, limiting the material choice, build size, cell density and in vivo printability. Sonicated ink (or sono-ink) and focused-ultrasound (FUS) writing have been developed for deep-penetration acoustic volumetric printing (DAVP) within optically scattering media and beneath soft tissues. This technology uses rapid sono-thermal heating to induce material solidification at the FUS focal region, constructing 3D objects without the need for a build platform. Here, we describe two procedures necessary to achieve DAVP. First, we provide a step-by-step guide for preparing and characterizing multicomponent viscoelastic self-enhancing sono-inks. The lower critical solution temperature polymers are synthesized as a phase-transition reversible acoustic absorber to formulate the sono-inks. We characterize the rheological, acoustic and cytocompatibility properties of the sono-inks. We then detail the procedure for building a 3D FUS printer by integrating an FUS transducer with a 3D printing platform. The development of the 3D FUS printer needs basic knowledge of the ultrasound system, FUS physics and volumetric printing. Using the sono-inks and the 3D FUS printer, we further provide guidance to evaluate the sono-thermal heating effect and characterize the volumetric printing resolutions. We demonstrate the printing of volumetric constructs through optically scattering materials such as centimeter-thick biological tissues. The procedures require ~470 h to complete.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Nature protocols

DOI

EISSN

1750-2799

ISSN

1754-2189

Publication Date

October 2025

Related Subject Headings

  • Bioinformatics
  • 11 Medical and Health Sciences
  • 06 Biological Sciences
  • 03 Chemical Sciences
 

Citation

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Kuang, X., Rong, Q., Belal, S., Wang, N., Vu, T., Herrera-Ruiz, A., … Yao, J. (2025). Sonicated inks and focused-ultrasound writing enable deep-penetration acoustic volumetric printing. Nature Protocols. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41596-025-01258-1
Kuang, Xiao, Qiangzhou Rong, Saud Belal, Nanchao Wang, Tri Vu, Abigail Herrera-Ruiz, Zebang Zhang, Yu Shrike Zhang, and Junjie Yao. “Sonicated inks and focused-ultrasound writing enable deep-penetration acoustic volumetric printing.Nature Protocols, October 2025. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41596-025-01258-1.
Kuang X, Rong Q, Belal S, Wang N, Vu T, Herrera-Ruiz A, et al. Sonicated inks and focused-ultrasound writing enable deep-penetration acoustic volumetric printing. Nature protocols. 2025 Oct;
Kuang, Xiao, et al. “Sonicated inks and focused-ultrasound writing enable deep-penetration acoustic volumetric printing.Nature Protocols, Oct. 2025. Epmc, doi:10.1038/s41596-025-01258-1.
Kuang X, Rong Q, Belal S, Wang N, Vu T, Herrera-Ruiz A, Zhang Z, Zhang YS, Yao J. Sonicated inks and focused-ultrasound writing enable deep-penetration acoustic volumetric printing. Nature protocols. 2025 Oct;

Published In

Nature protocols

DOI

EISSN

1750-2799

ISSN

1754-2189

Publication Date

October 2025

Related Subject Headings

  • Bioinformatics
  • 11 Medical and Health Sciences
  • 06 Biological Sciences
  • 03 Chemical Sciences