Back
19 September 2018

Prototype bionic eye created with custom 3D printer

August 30th, 2018

When he was an assistant professor at Princeton University, Michael McAlpine led the development of a 3D-printed bionic ear. Now an associate professor at the University of Minnesota, he has gone on to 3D-print a rudimentary bionic eye – and it could eventually lead to versions capable of replacing the real thing.

 

A McAlpine-led team began with a hemispherical glass dome, similar in size and shape to the back of a human eye. Using a custom-built 3D printer, they then added stripes of an ink containing silver particles – the ink successfully dried in place, as opposed to running down the inside of the dome and pooling at the bottom. Finally, over top of that ink base, a printed layer of a semiconducting polymer was added.

 

The result was an array of 3D-printed photodiodes, which are capable of converting light into an electrical current with an efficiency of 25 percent. McAlpine's team is now planning on boosting that efficiency, and incorporating many more of the photodiodes into a single dome. Ultimately, it is hoped that the technology could be used to create a fully-functioning bionic eye, which would restore a blind recipient's vision by stimulating their optic nerve in response to perceived light.

 

A paper on the research can be found in the journal Advanced Materials, while the 3D-printing process can be seen in the video below.

 

Besides the earlier-mentioned bionic ear, incidentally, McAlpine has also brought us 3D-printed items such as skin-mounted electronicsguides for nerve regenerationspinal-cord-injury "bridges," and model internal organsupon which surgeons could practice.

 

Back