Custom Event Setup

×

Click on the elements you want to track as custom events. Selected elements will appear in the list below.

Selected Elements (0)
    Skip to content

    Cart

    Your cart is empty

    Synchrotron X-ray Microfluidics & Sample Holders peer reviewed research

    Synchrotron X-ray Microfluidics | 3Dresyns MF RTP1 & UHF
    3Dresyns · Synchrotron X-ray microfluidics and sample holders (MF RTP1 + UHF) 3DRESYNS · PEER-REVIEWED RESEARCH SYNCHROTRON X-RAY MICROFLUIDICS & SAMPLE HOLDERS 3D-printed X-ray microfluidic chips and crystal sample holders for synchrotron crystallography at the ESRF RESEARCH AT A GLANCE X-RAY MICROFLUIDIC CHIPS MF RTP1 chip body (3D-MiXD). CRYSTAL SAMPLE HOLDERS UHF holder for the TR-icOS setup. ESRF SYNCHROTRON ID30A-3 beamline & icOS Lab. SERIAL & TIME- RESOLVED SSX in flow + µs spectroscopy. ⚠ Note: the cited papers identify the photopolymers as MF RTP1 and 3Dresyns UHF. Reported values are device- and experimental-setup-level results from the authors, not neat-resin specifications. At-a-glance summary · full evidence, sources & related products on the page.

    3Dresyn MF RTP1 and 3Dresyn UHF used to 3D-print X-ray–compatible microfluidic chips and custom protein-crystal sample holders, in peer-reviewed synchrotron research at the ESRF.
    What the studies report, attributed to their authors, at the device and experimental-setup level, not as neat-resin specifications.

    Evidence in numbers
    2
    Peer-reviewed papers: IUCrJ (2020) and Acta Crystallographica D (2024)
    2
    3Dresyns photopolymers used: MF RTP1 + UHF
    ESRF
    European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (Grenoble): beamlines and icOS Lab
    Asiga
    3D-printed on Asiga Pico2 / PICO 2HD DLP printers

    Applications: serial synchrotron crystallography in flow and time-resolved in-crystallo UV–Vis spectroscopy.

    3Dresyn MF RTP1 and 3Dresyn UHF are photopolymers used, in independent peer-reviewed research, to 3D-print sample environments for macromolecular crystallography at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF, Grenoble).

    MF RTP1 was used to print the body of an X-ray-compatible microfluidic chip (3D-MiXD) for serial synchrotron crystallography (SSX) in flow. UHF was used to print a custom protein-crystal sample holder for the TR-icOS time-resolved spectroscopy setup. Both parts were printed on Asiga DLP printers.

    Results below are attributed to their authors and are not first-party performance claims by 3Dresyns. They describe the printed devices and the experimental setups (channel size, surface roughness, data-collection time, sample volume, spectroscopic time resolution), not neat-resin datasheet specifications. The manufacturer reference values for the neat UHF resin are listed separately, from its datasheet.

    The peer-reviewed studies

    Serial synchrotron crystallography · IUCrJ (2020)

    An X-ray-compatible microfluidic chip printed in MF RTP1

    A 2020 study in IUCrJ (Monteiro et al.) introduced 3D-MiXD, an affordable, X-ray-compatible microfluidic device for serial synchrotron crystallography (SSX) in flow. The chip body was 3D-printed on an Asiga PICO 2HD DLP printer (385 nm; 37 × 37 µm voxels; 25 µm layers) in 3Dresyn MF RTP1, then sealed with thin Kapton windows. A 3D flow-focusing geometry centres the protein microcrystals in the stream so they can be probed by the X-ray beam with a well-defined, low dose.

    Primary-source attribution: the Methods (device fabrication) state that the chip body was 3D-printed in MF RTP1, a resin designed by Resyner Technologies under the 3Dresyns brand, a primary-source material attribution, not a hub claim.

    • Microchannel-wall roughness of about 3 µm (≈1.1% of the channel width).
    • Complete, highly redundant SSX data sets collected in about 60–90 min using only 50–70 µl of microcrystal slurry.
    • Stable operation for more than 8 h of continuous data collection on a single chip, on beamline ID30A-3 (MASSIF3).
    • Two benchmark proteins solved (lysozyme and aspartate α-decarboxylase); deposited as PDB 6rxh and 6rxi.

    All figures here are device- and experiment-level results reported by the authors, not properties of the neat resin.

    Time-resolved in-crystallo spectroscopy · Acta Crystallographica D (2024)

    A custom protein-crystal sample holder printed in UHF

    A 2024 study in Acta Crystallographica Section D (Engilberge et al.) described TR-icOS, a setup at the ESRF's icOS Lab for time-resolved microsecond UV–Vis absorption spectroscopy on protein crystals. The in-house sample holder (which mounts microcrystals between thin cyclic-olefin-copolymer films) was 3D-printed on an Asiga Pico2 DLP printer in 3Dresyn UHF. A nanosecond-laser pump and a microsecond xenon-flash probe record pump–probe spectra with delays from a few microseconds to seconds.

    Primary-source attribution: the Methods (sample holder, §2.5) state the holder was 3D-printed on an Asiga Pico2 using 3Dresyns UHF resin, again a primary-source material attribution.

    • Time resolution of about 2 µs, set by the xenon-flash probe.
    • Applied to crystallized bacteriorhodopsin: the M-state build-up and decay were tracked, with maximal occupancy between about 100 µs and 1 ms.
    • A laser-fluence (power) titration from 18 to 633 mJ cm⁻² identified roughly 100 mJ cm⁻² as the threshold above which photocycle artefacts appear, direct guidance for time-resolved diffraction experiments.

    The 3Dresyn UHF part is the printed sample-environment hardware; the spectroscopic results belong to the experiment and the setup.

    Why these resins

    Material rationale

    Why these photopolymers, for these sample environments

    MF RTP1: for the X-ray microfluidic chip

    • High-resolution DLP printing on a commercial Asiga printer, so small enclosed microchannels (down to ~200 × 280 µm in the cited device) can be printed reproducibly.
    • Low channel-wall roughness (~3 µm in the study), which helps clean flow behaviour and a low, well-defined X-ray background.
    • Affordable, manufacturable route to X-ray-compatible chips that install on standard beamlines with only minimal adjustments.

    UHF: for the crystal sample holder

    • Ultra-hard, rigid, high-resolution photopolymer suitable for small, dimensionally stable fixtures.
    • In-house, iterable design: fine, repeatable features print on a desktop DLP printer (Asiga Pico2), so the holder can be redesigned quickly.
    • Low shrinkage and good surface quality, supporting reproducible mounting of microcrystals.

    These points describe why each resin suits its printed part. The performance numbers above are device/setup-level results; UHF's neat-resin datasheet values are listed under specifications below.

    Evidence at a glance

    Peer-reviewed studies summary

    What each study printed and reported

    Study 3Dresyns resin → what was 3D-printed Printer Key reported result (device / setup level) Journal Year
    3D-MiXD microfluidic chip MF RTP1 → X-ray-compatible microfluidic chip body (3D flow-focusing) Asiga PICO 2HD (385 nm; 37 µm voxels; 25 µm layers) ~3 µm channel-wall roughness; complete SSX data sets in ~60–90 min from 50–70 µl; >8 h continuous operation; PDB 6rxh / 6rxi IUCrJ 2020
    TR-icOS sample holder UHF → custom protein-crystal sample holder for the TR-icOS spectroscopy setup Asiga Pico2 Time-resolved UV–Vis on bacteriorhodopsin crystals; ~2 µs resolution; M-state tracked 100 µs–1 ms; laser-fluence threshold ~100 mJ cm⁻² Acta Cryst D 2024

    Mobile: scroll horizontally to view all columns; the first column stays visible. Every value is a device- or experimental-setup-level result reported by the authors, not a neat-resin specification.

    Engineering insight

    System-level insight

    The resin is the printed sample environment, not the measurement

    Across both studies the pattern is the same: the 3Dresyns photopolymer provides the printed hardware that holds or flows the sample (an X-ray-compatible microfluidic chip in one case, a microcrystal sample holder in the other), while the scientific result (diffraction-data quality, spectroscopic time resolution, photocycle kinetics) is a property of the whole experimental setup and the synchrotron beamline. 3D printing makes these sample environments fast to iterate, affordable and easy to install, which is the enabling contribution.

    In synchrotron sample environments, the printed resin defines the hardware geometry and surface quality; the data and the time resolution belong to the experiment and the beamline, not to the neat resin.

    Manufacturer specifications

    Datasheet reference values

    Current manufacturer specifications for 3Dresyn UHF Bio (TDS)

    Current reference values for the commercial UHF Bio product page linked below. The 2024 paper names "3Dresyns UHF resin"; these values are provided as current manufacturer context, not as measurements of the specific batch or printed holder used in the paper.

    Property Typical reference value Method
    Shore hardness D80 ISO 868
    Tensile strength > 30 MPa ISO 527-1 / 527-2
    Flexural strength > 40 MPa ISO 178
    Young's modulus 1000–2000 MPa ISO 527
    Elongation at break < 15 % ISO 527
    Viscosity Low (optimised for recoating) n/a
    Shrinkage Very low (typical) n/a
    Chemistry Organo-tin-free, BPA-free, transition-metal-free n/a

    Printing range: SLA, DLP and LCD. Source: 3Dresyn UHF Bio datasheet (TDS-UHF-BIO-EN). MF RTP1 is the microfluidic “MF” grade named in the 2020 paper; the current 3Dresyns microfluidic “MF” resins are listed in the microfluidic resins collection. The chip parameters cited above (37 µm voxels, 25 µm layers, ~3 µm wall roughness) are study/device-level values, not neat-resin specifications.

    Frequently cited applications

    Application areas

    Where these materials are used

    • X-ray-compatible microfluidic devices for serial synchrotron crystallography (SSX)
    • In-flow and in-situ sample delivery for macromolecular crystallography
    • Custom protein-crystal sample holders for in-crystallo spectroscopy
    • Time-resolved (pump–probe) sample environments at synchrotron beamlines
    • 3D-printed optomechanical and laboratory fixtures
    • Microfluidic devices for structural biology

    The specific, verified demonstrations are the 3D-MiXD chip (MF RTP1) and the TR-icOS sample holder (UHF). The broader list reflects the application space discussed in the cited literature, not separate first-party claims.

    Materials used in the primary sources

    What the studies used

    The verified studies used 3Dresyn MF RTP1 (microfluidic “MF” grade) for the X-ray microfluidic chip and 3Dresyn UHF for the crystal sample holder.

    Frequently asked questions

    What role do 3Dresyn MF RTP1 and UHF play in this research?

    They are the materials used to 3D-print the sample-environment hardware. MF RTP1 was used to print the body of an X-ray-compatible microfluidic chip (3D-MiXD) for serial synchrotron crystallography in flow; UHF was used to print a custom protein-crystal sample holder for the TR-icOS time-resolved spectroscopy setup. The scientific results come from the synchrotron experiments; the resins provide the printed sample environments.

    Are the reported results properties of the resins?

    No. The reported figures are device- and experimental-setup-level results published by the authors: microchannel size and wall roughness, data-collection time and sample volume, spectroscopic time resolution and laser-fluence thresholds. They are not neat-resin specifications. Manufacturer reference values for the neat UHF resin are listed above, from its datasheet.

    Which 3Dresyns materials are confirmed, and how?

    Both are named in the papers' own Methods sections, not only in marketing. IUCrJ 2020 states the microfluidic chip body was 3D-printed in MF RTP1, a resin designed by Resyner Technologies under the 3Dresyns brand. Acta Crystallographica D 2024 states the sample holder was 3D-printed on an Asiga Pico2 using 3Dresyns UHF resin.

    What printers were used?

    Both sample environments were printed on Asiga DLP printers: a PICO 2HD for the 3D-MiXD microfluidic chip (385 nm, 37 × 37 µm voxels, 25 µm layers) and a Pico2 for the TR-icOS crystal sample holder. Both studies were carried out at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF) in Grenoble.

    Research materials

    For researchers and developers

    Research materials for synchrotron sample environments

    3Dresyn MF RTP1 and 3Dresyn UHF are the photopolymers behind the synchrotron sample environments summarised on this page. Used on Asiga DLP printers, MF RTP1 lets researchers fabricate X-ray-compatible microfluidic chips for serial synchrotron crystallography in flow, while UHF (an ultra-hard, high-resolution resin) lets groups print custom protein-crystal sample holders for time-resolved in-crystallo UV–Vis spectroscopy. Both routes are fast to iterate and easy to install at the beamline, which is the enabling contribution. For groups developing 3D-printed sample environments for the ESRF or other synchrotrons, these materials offer a manufacturable path from CAD to a printed chip or holder. The product and resource links on this page correspond to the materials used in the cited research; reported figures are device- and setup-level results, and final performance depends on the design, printer and process.

    Get the materials

    The photopolymers behind the synchrotron sample environments on this page: 3Dresyn UHF and the 3Dresyns microfluidic “MF” resins, together with the technical resources to print them.

    Reported results are device- and experimental-setup-level findings published by the cited authors, whose Methods identify the 3Dresyns materials used. They are not first-party performance claims by 3Dresyns, and the figures are not neat-resin specifications.

    Continue reading

    More 3Dresyns evidence

    Browse the full catalogue of peer-reviewed publications, market analyses and reviews referencing 3Dresyns materials.