| Literature DB >> 35054758 |
Mingxin Zhang1, Wenliang Song1, Yunxin Tang1, Xizi Xu1, Yingning Huang1, Dengguang Yu1,2.
Abstract
The search for higher-quality nanomaterials for medicinal applications continues. There are similarities between electrospun fibers and natural tissues. This property has enabled electrospun fibers to make significant progress in medical applications. However, electrospun fibers are limited to tissue scaffolding applications. When nanoparticles and nanofibers are combined, the composite material can perform more functions, such as photothermal, magnetic response, biosensing, antibacterial, drug delivery and biosensing. To prepare nanofiber and nanoparticle hybrids (NNHs), there are two primary ways. The electrospinning technology was used to produce NNHs in a single step. An alternate way is to use a self-assembly technique to create nanoparticles in fibers. This paper describes the creation of NNHs from routinely used biocompatible polymer composites. Single-step procedures and self-assembly methodologies are used to discuss the preparation of NNHs. It combines recent research discoveries to focus on the application of NNHs in drug release, antibacterial, and tissue engineering in the last two years.Entities:
Keywords: electrospinning; medical applications; nanoparticle; polymer blends; polymer composites
Year: 2022 PMID: 35054758 PMCID: PMC8780324 DOI: 10.3390/polym14020351
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1Schematic diagram of electrospinning setup.
Effect of control parameters on the morphology of electrospun fibers.
| Influence Factors | Influence Results | Reason for Influence | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| System parameters | Polymer concentration | The higher the concentration, the coarser the fiber | As polymer concentration or molecular weight increases, so does solution viscosity. Greater entanglement between molecule chains and increased intermolecular Coulomb forces result from this condition. As a result, the fiber diameter expands. | [ |
| The molecular weight of polymers | The higher the molecular weight, the thicker the fiber | [ | ||
| Surface tension | The higher the surface tension, the finer the fiber | The droplet’s surface tension rises, and the jet must expend more energy to offset this negative effect. The speed of the jet slows down, requiring more time to stretch the fibers. As a result, the fiber diameter decreases. | [ | |
| Conductivity | Conductivity increases within a reasonable range; fiber diameter decreases and increases again; fiber diameter is not controllable | The charge accumulates on the surface of the jet when the conductivity is increased. The fibers stretch more quickly in this state. As a result, the diameter of the fiber is lowered. The coulombic repulsion at the jet interface is intensified when the solution conductivity is raised further. Uncontrollable fiber diameter distribution results from the unstable bending whip effect. | [ | |
| Process parameters | Voltage | The fiber diameter decreases with higher voltage and increases with higher voltage | As the voltage rises, the charge density on the jet’s surface rises in accumulation. The circumstance may lead to a significant effect of jet stretching. Therefore, the fiber diameter decreases. The flow rate at the spinneret, on the other hand, increases as the voltage is raised more. Instead, the diameter of the fiber rises. | [ |
| Flow rate | The flow rate increases; the fiber diameter increases; and further increases may result in droplets | The solution at the spinneret rises as the flow rate increases. This condition causes the fiber’s diameter to thicken. When the flow rate is too fast, the solution’s gravity causes it to trickle straight down. | [ | |
| Receiving distance | Acceptance distance enlarges and fiber diameter reduces | The additional receiving distance gives the jet more time to extend. The fiber’s diameter shrinks in this circumstance. | [ | |
| Environmental factors | Temperature | Within a reasonable range, the fiber diameter decreases as the temperature increases | The temperature has the greatest influence on the viscosity of the solution. The viscosity of the solution reduces as the temperature rises. The intermolecular Coulomb force is lessened in this scenario. | [ |
| Humidity | Humidity increases and grooves appear on the fiber surface | When humidity is too high, fiber production is accelerated. Water droplet condensation on the fiber surface. Wrinkles occur on the surface of the fibers as a result of this process. | [ |
Figure 2The literature search statistics of “electrostatic spinning” and “electrospun nanoparticles” on the “Web of Science” platform, respectively.
Figure 3Electrospun fiber and NPs structures and their hybrids in medical direction.
Figure 4(A) Simple preparation of NNHs based on the single-step process. (B) Schematic diagram of coaxial preparation of NNHs and Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM), reprinted with permission from Ref. [84]. Copyright 2021 John Wiley and Sons. (C) Schematic diagram of simultaneous electrospinning and electrospraying. (D) Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) images of CDP-PVP-PANI fiber cross-sections and Energy dispersive X-Ray spectroscopy map. Reprinted from Ref. [85]. (E) Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy (STEM) images of PVA/AS or PVA/CLO fibers with different particle concentrations, Reprinted from Ref. [82].
Figure 5(A) Schematic of in situ ZIF-8 growth on PLA fibers and Scanning Electron Microscopy (STEM) images of ZIF@PLA-P, reprinted with permission from Ref. [95]. Copyright 2021 ACS Publications. (B) Schematic of PAN@COF synthesis and EDS mapping images reprinted with permission from Ref. [91]. Copyright 2022 Elsevier. (C) Transmission Electron Microscopy images of MBNM films prepared based on different contents of PAA, reprinted with permission from Ref. [96]. Copyright 2021 Elsevier. (D) Schematic of LLTO NF process prepared by electrospinning followed by calcination, reprinted with permission from Ref. [97]. Copyright 2021 John Wiley and Sons.
Figure 6(A) Transmission electron microscopy images of engineered spindles-on-a-string (SOS) and in vitro drug dissolution curves reprinted with permission from Ref. [113]. Copyright 2021 Springer Nature. (B) Preparation process of PVA/PVP-PLNPs nanofiber membrane reprinted from Ref. [114]. (C) Digital photographs of various fiber scaffolds reprinted with permission from Ref. [116]. Copyright 2019 Elsevier.
Figure 7(A) Schematic diagram of Janus nanofiber preparation. (B) Schematic diagram of scanning electron microscopy of residual ECNPs after solubilization. (C) In vitro drug dissolution profiles for MB and KET. (D) Diagram of the drug release mechanism. Reprinted from Ref. [121].
Figure 8(A) Schematic diagram of the preparation process of magneto-thermal responsive nanofiber MSP reprinted from Ref. [129]. (B) Drug release profile of PH-responsive NNHs reprinted with permission from Ref. [127]. Copyright 2020 Springer Nature. (C) Drug release from electrically stimulated PCL/GO/Q composite nanofiber under 10 HZ electrical stimulation reprinted from Ref. [120].
Examples of NNHs used as antimicrobial agents.
| Polymers | NPs | NNHs | Preparation Methods | Bacterial Strains | Evaluation Methodology | Antibacterial Ability | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PVA/CS | CuNPs | PVA/CS/Cu | Co-blending | Antibacterial Circle | The size of the inhibition circle is: | [ | |
| GEL/PCL/P(DMC-AMA) | nHAP | JGM | Co-blending | CFU Counting | The bacterial viability of | [ | |
| Starch | AgNPs | starch/AgNPs | In-situ synthesis | Disc Diffusion-8mm | [ | ||
| PMMA | ZnO nanorods/AgNPs | PMMA/ZnO-Ag NF | Co-blending, in situ synthesis | Disc Diffusion-6mm | [ | ||
| CH/PEO | 8Ce-BG | CH-PEO-(8Ce-BG) | Co-blending | Flat Counting Method | [ | ||
| PLLA | GO-Ag | PLLA-GO-AgNPs | Co-blending | Antibacterial Circle | 3.01 mm–4.62 mm | [ | |
| PVP K90/EC | CIP/AgNPs | PVP-CIP//EC-AgNPs | Co-blending | Antibacterial Circle | 24 h, | [ | |
| PVA | ZnO | PVA/ZnO | Self-assembly | MIC method | [ | ||
| PLGA/SF | ZnO | PSZ | Co-blending | turbidity measurement method | PSZ antibacterial activity against | [ |
Figure 9(A) Process diagram for the preparation of parallel structured NNHs, reprinted with permission from Ref. [132]. Copyright 2020 Elsevier. (B) Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) images of bacteria cultured on PLLA and PLLA/3GO-Ag, reprinted with permission from Ref. [133]. Copyright 2020 Elsevier. (C) MTT method to measure the cellular activity of various materials on epidermal cells, reprinted with permission from Ref. [135]. Copyright 2020 Elsevier. (D) Optical images of bronchial stents on rabbit trachea and assessment of bacterial inhibition by plate count method, reprinted from Ref. [137].
Figure 10NNHs for promoting bone tissue growth, (A) Schematic preparation of loaded dual nanoparticle electrospun scaffolds, reprinted from Ref. [159]. (B) Osteogenic ability of loaded CaPs with unloaded electrospun fibers (after alizarin red staining and), reprinted with permission from Ref. [160]. Copyright 2020 Elsevier. (C) PCL and MoS2 co-blended preparation of NNHs. Schematic diagram and micro-CT imaging with and without MoS2 under photothermal conditions, Reprinted with permission from Ref. [156]. Copyright 2021 John Wiley and Sons.
Figure 11NNHs for other tissue engineering applications. (A) Schematic diagram for skin tissue engineering, Reprinted with permission from Ref. [167]. Copyright 2021 Elsevier. Tensile curves of CNT/silk scaffolds (B) for cardiac tissue engineering and (C) electrical conductivity, Reprinted with permission from Ref. [164]. Copyright 2020 John Wiley and Sons. (D) Process flow diagram for neural tissue engineering preparation, Reprinted with permission from ref. [164]. Copyright 2020 John Wiley and Sons.