Literature DB >> 22950674

High strength of physical hydrogels based on poly(acrylic acid)-g-poly(ethylene glycol) methyl ether: role of chain architecture on hydrogel properties.

Jun Yang1, Cheng Gong, Fu-Kuan Shi, Xu-Ming Xie.   

Abstract

This investigation was to study the connections between polymer branch architecture of physical hydrogels and their properties. The bottle-brush-like polymer chains of poly(acrylic acid)-g-poly(ethylene glycol) methyl ether (PAA-g-mPEG) with PAA as backbones and mPEG as branch architecture were synthesized and in situ grafted from silica nanoparticles (SNs) to construct hydrogels cross-linked networks in aqueous solutions. The structural variables to be discussed included molecular weight and molar ratio of branch chains, and new aspects of the formation mechanism of physical hydrogels with branch structure in the absence of organic cross-links were present. The results indicated that the differences of polymer chain architecture could be distinguished via their different interactions that are present by gelation process and mature gel properties, such as gel strength and swelling ratio. The gelation occurred at the critical polymer concentration and molecular weight, respectively, and the inorganic/organic (SNs/PAA-g-mPEG) nanoparticles began to entangle and construct the cross-linking networks afterward. The gel-to-sol transition temperature (T(g-s)) and radii of SNs that were encapsulated by polymer chains as a function of time for chains' disentanglement were monitored according to the observation of the dissolution process, and the molecular weight between two consecutive entanglements (M(e)) was calculated thereafter. This study showed that the introduction of branch chain onto the linear backbone significantly promoted the chain interactions and increased entanglement density, which contributed to the hydrogels' network integrity and rigidity, thus illustrating greater elongation at break and tensile strength than the hydrogels formulated with linear polymer chains.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22950674     DOI: 10.1021/jp303710d

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Chem B        ISSN: 1520-5207            Impact factor:   2.991


  2 in total

Review 1.  Multi-scale multi-mechanism design of tough hydrogels: building dissipation into stretchy networks.

Authors:  Xuanhe Zhao
Journal:  Soft Matter       Date:  2014-02-07       Impact factor: 3.679

2.  Ultra-stretchable hydrogels with hierarchical hydrogen bonds.

Authors:  Yujing You; Jian Yang; Qiang Zheng; Ningkun Wu; Zhongda Lv; Zhiqiang Jiang
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-07-16       Impact factor: 4.379

  2 in total

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