Lattice CF

Guide cell alignment and securely position microtissues in a single, precision-manufactured scaffold.

The box design features a rectangular microfiber architecture with 100–300 µm spacing, creating distinct microtissue compartments. An additional layer of catching fibers is incorporated into the box design to enhance cell attachment during the seeding process.

Spacing
300 µm
Thickness
200 µm
Fiber Diameter
10 µm
Material
PCL
Sterility
Sterile
Well Plate Sizes
6, 12, 24, 48, 96
Surface area
.35 m²/g
# of Scaffolds
6, 12, 24, 48, or 96
SKU #
VBX.0002
Surface treatment
Non-treated
contact us for Pricing  >
You can also contact us at info@vivotex.com or +1 (855)–VIVOTEX.

Guide cell alignment and securely position microtissues in a single, precision-manufactured scaffold.

The box design features a rectangular microfiber architecture with 100–300 µm spacing, creating distinct microtissue compartments. An additional layer of catching fibers is incorporated into the box design to enhance cell attachment during the seeding process.

KEY BENEFITS

Micron-Level Architectural Precision via Melt Electrowriting

Manufactured using melt electrowriting (MEW), the scaffolds deliver precise fiber diameter, fiber spacing, and alignment, with extreme precision for highly reproducible experiments.

Why it matters: Manufacturing consistency directly impacts experimental reproducibility and comparability across studies.

Provides a Backbone for Hydrogels

VivoTex MEW Scaffolds provide mechanical reinforcements to soft hydrogels that enable handling and manuverability  

Why it matters: Cells prefer to grow in soft hydrogels. Handling, moving, and processing soft hydrogel constructs is challenging, and often introduces artifacts. MEW scaffolds provide a simple and powerful solution to workflows with soft hydrogel cultures.

Structural Cues for Cellular Patterning

Microfibers provide contact guidance cues that affect cell-cell interaction, cell elongation, migration, and organization along a defined axis, critical for modeling biological tissues  

Why it matters: All biological tissue comprise fibrous microstructures that provide structural cues for cells and enable functional mechanical properties. Most hydrogel   matrices fail to replicate the structural cues present in native ECM, limiting biological relevance.

Integrated Catching Fibers for Microtissue Retention

Secondary “catching” fibers act as physical anchoring points for spheroids, organoids, or microtissues, reducing movement and positional variability during culture.

Why it matters: Improves reproducibility and spatial control in experiments combining scaffolds with pre-formed microtissues.

Designed for Standard Lab Workflows

Scaffolds are designed to operate with standard well plates and other culture containers like petri dishes and chamber slides. They provide a solid and stable substrate for seeding, media exchange, staining, and imaging. No specialized equipment is required.

Why it matters: Enables advanced 3D culture without disrupting established lab protocols.

Applications & technical highlights

This Pattern Is Well-suited For:

Aligned muscle, neural, and connective tissue models

  • Organoid or spheroid-scaffold co-cultures
  • Drug response and mechanobiology studies
  • In-vitro models requiring controlled tissue architecture

Manufacturing Method:

Melt Electrowriting (MEW)

Architecture:

Aligned primary fibers with integrated catching fibers

Format:

Compatible with standard well plate configurations

Use Case:

3D cell culture and microtissue integration

Mechanism of action

This scaffold functions through architecture-driven physical cues that regulate cell organization and microtissue positioning in 3D culture.

Aligned fibers provide anisotropic topographical guidance, directing cell adhesion, elongation, and migration along a defined axis.

Secondary catching fibers introduce localized physical constraints that intercept and stabilize spheroids or microtissues during seeding and early culture. Together, these features enable controlled cell alignment and reproducible microtissue placement while maintaining an open fiber network for media access and imaging. The scaffold’s deterministic fiber architecture, enabled by melt electrowriting, ensures consistent structural cues across experiments.

Configurable Formats

If this design does not meet your specific application, we can also collaborate to design custom scaffolds. This scaffold is available in multiple geometries and configurations to accommodate different experimental designs while maintaining consistent fiber alignment and architectural control.

In addition to flat formats compatible with standard well plates, the aligned fiber architecture can be fabricated in non-planar geometries, including tubular configurations. These formats are suited for models that require curvature, a defined lumen, or circumferential cell organization.

Experimental Relevance:

Scaffold geometry can influence cell organization, nutrient transport, and mechanical boundary conditions. Access to multiple form factors allows researchers to select a geometry that better matches their biological model without changing the underlying fiber architecture.

Use Cases May Include:

Flat scaffolds for aligned 3D cell culture and imaging in well-plate formats

  • Tubular geometries for lumenized, circumferential, or axis-guided tissue models
  • Alternative dimensions or layouts to match specific culture systems or devices

‍Configuration availability may vary. Contact Us at info@vivotex.com to discuss geometry options suitable for your experimental requirements or go here to learn more about our Custom Scaffold Solutions.

Material science overview

Manufactured via melt electrowriting, this scaffold features precisely placed, continuous microfibers with controlled diameter, spacing, and alignment. The resulting anisotropic architecture provides predictable pore geometry and mechanical behavior, while integrated catching fibers introduce localized structural features without reducing porosity. Deterministic fabrication ensures consistent material properties and reproducibility across experiments.

Expected Biological Response
Indications, contraindications, and use context
technical documentation

How to Use This Product

For detailed guidance on handling, seeding, and culture workflows, visit the Getting Started page in our Support Center.

Documentation

Research Studies Using This Pattern

  • [Article link]

Lattice CF

Spacing
300 µm
Thickness
200 µm
Fiber Diameter
10 µm
Material
PCL
Sterility
Sterile
Well Plate Sizes
6, 12, 24, 48, 96
Surface area
.35 m²/g
# of Scaffolds
6, 12, 24, 48, or 96
SKU #
VBX.0002
Surface treatment
Non-treated
contact us for Pricing  >
You can also contact us at info@vivotex.com or +1 (855)–VIVOTEX.

Scaffold Type

GEOMETRY/DESIGN

STRENGTHS

trade-offs

USE CASES/TISSUES

Box Pattern

Rectilinear grid with uniform pores (e.g. ~150 µm)
Highly reproducible, easy seeding and imaging; strong baseline models.
Limited directional guidance for anisotropic tissues.
Epithelial barrier models, organoids, baseline comparisons

Box Pattern with Catching Fibers

Same grid design with stabilizing “catching” fibers spanning pore gaps.
Maintains spheroid/organoid stability in long-term culture; reduces movement during handling.
Extra fibers can slightly obstruct imaging and migration paths.
Long-term tumor spheroid culture, drug testing in 3D aggregates.

Aligned Pattern

Parallel fibers oriented in one direction; controlled fiber alignment.
Strong cues for cell alignment and elongation; mimics anisotropic ECM.
Less isotropic; biased growth may not suit mixed populations.
Muscle, tendon, neural, vascular alignment studies.

Aligned Pattern with Catching Fibers

Aligned scaffold with added cross-support fibers.
Combines directional guidance with scaffold stability; supports extended culture.
Higher fiber density may limit imaging clarity.
Long-term aligned tissue regeneration, mixed alignment + structure models.

Isotropic Pattern

Randomized, Multi-angle fibers producing decagon / omnidirectional pore geometries.
Mimics heterogeneous ECM; uniform diffusion; versatile for non-directional growth.
Lacks alignment cues; less suited for tissues requiring order.
Skin/epithelial models, barrier testing, wound healing.

Box Pattern

GEOMETRY / DESIGN

Rectilinear grid with uniform pores (e.g. ~150 µm).

STRENGTHS

Highly reproducible, easy seeding and imaging; strong baseline models.

trade-offs

Limited directional guidance for anisotropic tissues.

USE CASES / TISSUES

Epithelial barrier models, organoids, baseline comparisons.

Box Pattern With Catching Fibers

GEOMETRY / DESIGN

Same grid design with stabilizing “catching” fibers spanning pore gaps.

STRENGTHS

Maintains spheroid / organoid stability in long-term culture; reduces movement during handling.

trade-offs

Extra fibers can slightly obstruct imaging and migration paths.

USE CASES / TISSUES

Long-term tumor spheroid culture, drug testing in 3D aggregates.

Aligned Pattern

GEOMETRY / DESIGN

Parallel fibers oriented in one direction; controlled fiber alignment.

STRENGTHS

Strong cues for cell alignment and elongation; mimics anisotropic ECM.

trade-offs

Less isotropic; biased growth may not suit mixed populations.

USE CASES / TISSUES

Muscle, tendon, neural, vascular alignment studies.

Aligned Pattern With Catching Fibers

GEOMETRY / DESIGN

Aligned scaffold with added cross-support fibers.

STRENGTHS

Combines directional guidance with scaffold stability; supports extended culture.

trade-offs

Higher fiber density may limit imaging clarity.

USE CASES / TISSUES

Long-term aligned tissue regeneration, mixed alignment + structure models.

Isotropic Pattern

GEOMETRY / DESIGN

Randomized, Multi-angle fibers producing decagon / omnidirectional pore geometries.

STRENGTHS

Mimics heterogeneous ECM; uniform diffusion; versatile for non-directional growth.

trade-offs

Lacks alignment cues; less suited for tissues requiring order.

USE CASES / TISSUES

Skin / epithelial models, barrier testing, wound healing.

VivoTex Custom 3D Scaffolds: Tailored to Suit Your Needs

VivoTex scaffolds can be tailored to replicate specific tissue environments, giving researchers control over architecture, porosity, fiber diameter, and mechanical properties. This flexibility enables precise experimental models for diverse applications—from regenerative studies to oncology and drug discovery.

Ready to try our scaffolds? Contact us and we'll send you a sample kit.

Have Questions? Let's discuss Your Research Needs

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