Necroprinting Isnβt As Bad As It Sounds

A mosquito has a very finely tuned proboscis that is excellent at slipping through your skin to suck out the blood beneath. Researchers at McGill University recently figured that the same biological structure could also prove useful in another wasβas a fine and precise nozzle for 3D printing (via Tomβs Hardware).

To achieve this feat, the research team harvested the proboscis from a female mosquito, as only the female of the species sucks blood in this timeline. The mosquitoβs proboscis was chosen over other similar biological structures, like insect stingers and snake fangs. It was prized for its tiny size, with an inside diameter of just 20 micrometersβwhich outdoes just about any man-made nozzle out there. Itβs also surprisingly strong, able to resistΒ up to 60 kPa of pressure from the fluid squirted through it.
Of course, you canβt just grab a mosquito and stick it on your 3D printer. It takes very fine work to remove the proboscis and turn it into a functional nozzle; it also requires the use of 3D printed scaffolding to give the structure additional strength. The nozzle is apparently used with bio-inks, rather than molten plastic, and proved capable of printing some basic 3D structures in testing.
Amusingly, the process has been termed 3D necroprinting, we suspect both because it uses a dead organism and because it sounds cool on the Internet. Weβve created a necroprinting tag, just in case, but weβre not holding our breath for this to become theΒ next big thing. At 20 um, more likely the next small thing.
Further details are available in the research paper. Weβve actually featured quite a few mosquito hacks over the years. Video after the break.
[Thanks to Greg Gavutis for the tip!]