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Programmable acoustofluidic engineering for creating gradient biomaterials.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Lu, Y; He, Y; Xia, J; Liu, M; Rich, J; Jin, K; Zhong, R; Yang, K; Qian, J; Chen, Y; Li, K; Ma, Z; Huang, TJ
Published in: Science advances
December 2025

Gradient biomaterials that exhibit spatially varying physical, chemical, or biological properties can be used in various applications such as tissue engineering, organoid development, mechanobiology, and spatially controlled drug delivery. However, current fabrication methods often suffer from limited gradient precision, restricted material compatibility, and poor reproducibility. Here, we introduced gradient regulation via acoustofluidic dynamic engineering (GRADE), a programmable system to generate high-fidelity gradient biomaterials across different material systems. By incorporating focused interdigital transducers with the pulsed surface acoustic wave actuation, GRADE can achieve tunable and directional acoustic streaming (0 to 22 millimeters per second), which allows accurate regulation of the gradient magnitude and length. Its open microchannel design enables nondestructive extraction of centimeter-scale gradients and supports device reuse, enhancing practicality and scalability. In contrast to magnetic or electrospinning techniques that are limited to specific material types, the GRADE approach supports composition-independent fluid manipulation of a diverse group of biomaterials and cross-linking methods, thus providing greater versatility and translational potential. Furthermore, we demonstrate stiffness-dependent mechanosensation in stem cells cultured on customized gradient substrates, which validates the platform's usability. The experimental results show that GRADE has the ability to uncover mechanobiological responses in physiologically relevant contexts. All these results establish GRADE as a powerful and versatile platform for gradient biomaterial fabrication. It shows broad potential to advance both fundamental research and translational biomedical applications.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Science advances

DOI

EISSN

2375-2548

ISSN

2375-2548

Publication Date

December 2025

Volume

11

Issue

51

Start / End Page

eaeb0879

Related Subject Headings

  • Tissue Engineering
  • Humans
  • Biocompatible Materials
  • Acoustics
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Lu, Y., He, Y., Xia, J., Liu, M., Rich, J., Jin, K., … Huang, T. J. (2025). Programmable acoustofluidic engineering for creating gradient biomaterials. Science Advances, 11(51), eaeb0879. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aeb0879
Lu, Yujing, Ye He, Jianping Xia, Mingyuan Liu, Joseph Rich, Ke Jin, Ruoyu Zhong, et al. “Programmable acoustofluidic engineering for creating gradient biomaterials.Science Advances 11, no. 51 (December 2025): eaeb0879. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aeb0879.
Lu Y, He Y, Xia J, Liu M, Rich J, Jin K, et al. Programmable acoustofluidic engineering for creating gradient biomaterials. Science advances. 2025 Dec;11(51):eaeb0879.
Lu, Yujing, et al. “Programmable acoustofluidic engineering for creating gradient biomaterials.Science Advances, vol. 11, no. 51, Dec. 2025, p. eaeb0879. Epmc, doi:10.1126/sciadv.aeb0879.
Lu Y, He Y, Xia J, Liu M, Rich J, Jin K, Zhong R, Yang K, Qian J, Chen Y, Li K, Ma Z, Huang TJ. Programmable acoustofluidic engineering for creating gradient biomaterials. Science advances. 2025 Dec;11(51):eaeb0879.

Published In

Science advances

DOI

EISSN

2375-2548

ISSN

2375-2548

Publication Date

December 2025

Volume

11

Issue

51

Start / End Page

eaeb0879

Related Subject Headings

  • Tissue Engineering
  • Humans
  • Biocompatible Materials
  • Acoustics