| Literature DB >> 28449541 |
Kordian Chamerski1, Witold Korzekwa2, Jacek Filipecki1, Olha Shpotyuk3, Marcin Stopa4,5, Piotr Jeleń6, Maciej Sitarz6.
Abstract
One of the most important field of interest in respect to hydrogel materials is their capability to water storage. The problem mentioned above plays an important role regarding to diffusion of fluid media containing nanoparticles, what is very useful in biomedical applications, such as artificial polymeric implants, drug delivery systems or tissue engineering.In presented work, dehydration process in hydrogels used in ophthalmology as intraocular lenses was observed. Before measurements studied materials were immersed in deionized water and saline solution to obtain equilibrium swelling state. Studies of the dehydration process were carried out by use of gravimetric analysis, Fourier-Transform Infrared and Positron Annihilation Lifetime Spectroscopy. Obtained results revealed changes in hydrogen bonding structure and free volume holes induced by saline solution ingredients.Entities:
Keywords: Dehydration; FTIR; Free volume; Hydrogen bonding; PALS; PHEMA
Year: 2017 PMID: 28449541 PMCID: PMC5406318 DOI: 10.1186/s11671-017-2055-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Fig. 1Dehydration curves obtained as changes in mass ratios
Results of diffusion coefficient calculations
| Solution | Mt/M∞ | t1/2 [min1/2] | L [cm] | D [cm2 · s−1] |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deionizedwater | 0.47 | 3.46 | ~0.5 | (1.498 ± 0.005) · 10−7 |
| Saline | 3.16 | (1.798 ± 0.005) · 10−7 |
Fig. 2FTIR spectra of material subjected to (a) deionized water and (b) saline solution
Fig. 3OH stretching band changes in (a) deionized water and (b) saline solution subjected samples
Fig. 4Demonstration of OH sub-bands fitting procedure for (a) deionized water and (b) saline solution
Assignments of considered IR bands in PHEMA
| Assignments | Wave number, cm−1 |
|---|---|
| Free OH | 3630–3670 |
| Dimer OH (OH · · · OH), intramolecular OH (OH · · · O = C) | 3540–3550 |
| Intermolecular OH, Aggregates OH (· · ·OH · · · OH · · · OH · ··) | 3400–3450 |
| 3240–3280 |
Fig. 5Shifting of (a) 3250 cm−1, (b) 3400 cm−1, (c) 3545 cm−1, and (d) 3635 cm−1 OH stretching sub-bands in time
Fig. 6Integral intensity changes in time for OH (a) 3250 cm-1, (b) 3400 cm-1, (c) 3545 cm-1 and (d) 3635 cm-1 sub-bands
Fig. 7Free volume holes evolution during dehydration process
Fig. 8Relationship between relative water content and free volume holes sizes