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Bi-functional silica nanoparticles for simultaneous enhancement of mechanical strength and swelling capacity of hydrogels

A combination of strong load-bearing capacity and high swelling degree is desired in hydrogels for many applications including drug delivery, tissue engineering, and biomedical engineering. However, a compromising relationship exists between these two most important characteristics of hydrogels. Imp...

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Autores principales: Sujan, Majharul Islam, Sarkar, Stephen Don, Sultana, Salma, Bushra, Labiba, Tareq, Rizwan, Roy, Chanchal Kumar, Azam, Md. Shafiul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9049678/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35496010
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra09528d
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author Sujan, Majharul Islam
Sarkar, Stephen Don
Sultana, Salma
Bushra, Labiba
Tareq, Rizwan
Roy, Chanchal Kumar
Azam, Md. Shafiul
author_facet Sujan, Majharul Islam
Sarkar, Stephen Don
Sultana, Salma
Bushra, Labiba
Tareq, Rizwan
Roy, Chanchal Kumar
Azam, Md. Shafiul
author_sort Sujan, Majharul Islam
collection PubMed
description A combination of strong load-bearing capacity and high swelling degree is desired in hydrogels for many applications including drug delivery, tissue engineering, and biomedical engineering. However, a compromising relationship exists between these two most important characteristics of hydrogels. Improving both of these important properties simultaneously in a single hydrogel material is still beyond the satisfactory limit. Herein, we report a novel approach to address this problem by introducing a silica-based bi-functional 3D crosslinker. Our bi-functional silica nanoparticles (BF-Si NPs) possess amine groups that are able to offer pseudo-crosslinking effects induced by inter-cohesive bonding, and acrylate groups that can form conventional covalent crosslinking in the same hydrogel. We fabricated polyacrylic acid (PAc-Si) and polyacrylamide (PAm-Si) hydrogels using our BF-Si NPs via free radical polymerization to demonstrate this concept. Incorporation of the BF-Si crosslinkers into the hydrogels has resulted in a large enhancement in the mechanical properties compared to conventional hydrogel crosslinked with N,N′-methylene bisacrylamide (MBA). For instance, tensile strength and the toughness increased by more than 6 times and 10 times, respectively, upon replacing MBA with BF-Si in polyacrylamide hydrogel. Moreover, the hydrogels crosslinked with BF-Si exhibited a remarkably elevated level of swelling capacity in the aqueous medium. Our facile yet smart strategy of employing the 3D bi-functional crosslinker for combining high swelling degree and strong mechanical properties in the same hydrogels can be extended to the fabrication of many similar acrylate or vinyl polymer hydrogels.
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spelling pubmed-90496782022-04-29 Bi-functional silica nanoparticles for simultaneous enhancement of mechanical strength and swelling capacity of hydrogels Sujan, Majharul Islam Sarkar, Stephen Don Sultana, Salma Bushra, Labiba Tareq, Rizwan Roy, Chanchal Kumar Azam, Md. Shafiul RSC Adv Chemistry A combination of strong load-bearing capacity and high swelling degree is desired in hydrogels for many applications including drug delivery, tissue engineering, and biomedical engineering. However, a compromising relationship exists between these two most important characteristics of hydrogels. Improving both of these important properties simultaneously in a single hydrogel material is still beyond the satisfactory limit. Herein, we report a novel approach to address this problem by introducing a silica-based bi-functional 3D crosslinker. Our bi-functional silica nanoparticles (BF-Si NPs) possess amine groups that are able to offer pseudo-crosslinking effects induced by inter-cohesive bonding, and acrylate groups that can form conventional covalent crosslinking in the same hydrogel. We fabricated polyacrylic acid (PAc-Si) and polyacrylamide (PAm-Si) hydrogels using our BF-Si NPs via free radical polymerization to demonstrate this concept. Incorporation of the BF-Si crosslinkers into the hydrogels has resulted in a large enhancement in the mechanical properties compared to conventional hydrogel crosslinked with N,N′-methylene bisacrylamide (MBA). For instance, tensile strength and the toughness increased by more than 6 times and 10 times, respectively, upon replacing MBA with BF-Si in polyacrylamide hydrogel. Moreover, the hydrogels crosslinked with BF-Si exhibited a remarkably elevated level of swelling capacity in the aqueous medium. Our facile yet smart strategy of employing the 3D bi-functional crosslinker for combining high swelling degree and strong mechanical properties in the same hydrogels can be extended to the fabrication of many similar acrylate or vinyl polymer hydrogels. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020-02-10 /pmc/articles/PMC9049678/ /pubmed/35496010 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra09528d Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Sujan, Majharul Islam
Sarkar, Stephen Don
Sultana, Salma
Bushra, Labiba
Tareq, Rizwan
Roy, Chanchal Kumar
Azam, Md. Shafiul
Bi-functional silica nanoparticles for simultaneous enhancement of mechanical strength and swelling capacity of hydrogels
title Bi-functional silica nanoparticles for simultaneous enhancement of mechanical strength and swelling capacity of hydrogels
title_full Bi-functional silica nanoparticles for simultaneous enhancement of mechanical strength and swelling capacity of hydrogels
title_fullStr Bi-functional silica nanoparticles for simultaneous enhancement of mechanical strength and swelling capacity of hydrogels
title_full_unstemmed Bi-functional silica nanoparticles for simultaneous enhancement of mechanical strength and swelling capacity of hydrogels
title_short Bi-functional silica nanoparticles for simultaneous enhancement of mechanical strength and swelling capacity of hydrogels
title_sort bi-functional silica nanoparticles for simultaneous enhancement of mechanical strength and swelling capacity of hydrogels
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9049678/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35496010
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra09528d
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