| Literature DB >> 35735708 |
Pengfei Zou1, Jiaxin Yao1, Ya-Nan Cui1, Te Zhao1,2, Junwei Che1,3, Meiyan Yang1, Zhiping Li1, Chunsheng Gao1.
Abstract
In recent years, hydrogel-based research in biomedical engineering has attracted more attention. Cellulose-based hydrogels have become a research hotspot in the field of functional materials because of their outstanding characteristics such as excellent flexibility, stimulus-response, biocompatibility, and degradability. In addition, cellulose-based hydrogel materials exhibit excellent mechanical properties and designable functions through different preparation methods and structure designs, demonstrating huge development potential. In this review, we have systematically summarized sources and types of cellulose and the formation mechanism of the hydrogel. We have reviewed and discussed the recent progress in the development of cellulose-based hydrogels and introduced their applications such as ionic conduction, thermal insulation, and drug delivery. Also, we analyzed and highlighted the trends and opportunities for the further development of cellulose-based hydrogels as emerging materials in the future.Entities:
Keywords: application; biomedical engineering; cellulose; hydrogels
Year: 2022 PMID: 35735708 PMCID: PMC9222388 DOI: 10.3390/gels8060364
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gels ISSN: 2310-2861
Figure 1The recent advances of cellulose hydrogels in this review.
Figure 2Chemical structure of cellulose and its derivatives. (a) Chemical structure of cellulose. (b) Scanning electron micrograph images of Acetobacter xylinum and formation of bacterial cellulose. Adapted with permission from Ref. [43] Copyright 2019, Springer Nature. (c) The chemical structure of cellulose and some of its derivatives. Adapted with permission from Ref. [54] Copyright 2016, WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Summary of the cellulose classification, property and usage.
| Classification | Name | Property | Usage | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Natural cellulose | Plant cellulose | thermal and mechanical degradation; major components of plant cell walls. | fabrics, ropes, tapes, isolating materials. | [ |
| Bacterial cellulose | BC | ___ | dura mater replacement, diagnostic sensors, dental grafting, artificial cornea, wound dressing, drug delivery system, bone tissue engineering. | [ |
| Cellulose derivatives | Phosphate cellulose | ___ | enrichment agents, ion exchangers. | [ |
| Nitrocellulose | flammability, bonding. | coatings, adhesives, cosmetics, food packagings, centrifugation tube materials. | [ | |
| Cellulose acetate (CA) | biodegradable, renewable, non-corrosive, non-toxic, biocompatible. | nanocomposites for biomedical applications and equipment. | [ | |
| Methylcellulose | high water retention, thermogelation, macro-phase separation, syneresis. | slow-release preparation. | [ | |
| Ethylcellulose | thermoplastic, water insoluble, nonionic, thermally stable, hydrophobicity. | controlled release formulations, coating agents. | [ | |
| Carboxymethyl | hydrophilic, bioadhesive, non-toxic, pH sensitive, thermally stable. | hindering crystallization or degradation of the drug; enhancing the frequency of drug release. | [ | |
| Hydroxyethyl cellulose (HEC) | suspension, adhesion, emulsification, dispersion, moisture | food stabilizers, thickeners, adhesives, pharmaceutical excipients, stabilizers, film coating agents. | [ | |
| Hydroxypropyl cellulose (HPC) | biodegradable and biocompatible, self-repairing abilities, shape memory, unique hydrophilic/hydrophobic change. | thermo-responsive hydrogels. | [ | |
| Hydroxypropyl | viscous soluble fiber, high viscosity, gelling. | thickener, emulsifier, stabilizer, gelling agents, antioxidants, hypoglycemics. | [ | |
| Hydroxyethyl | water solubility, thermally stable, gel properties. | hypoglycemics, antioxidant, coatings, medical dressings. | [ |
Modification method and classification of cellulose derivatives.
| Methods | Classification |
|---|---|
| Physical modification | film cellulose; |
| microcrystalline cellulose; | |
| spherical cellulose; | |
| nano-cellulose; | |
| Chemical modification | degradation reactions: acid-base, oxidative, biodegradation, mechanical processing; |
| hydroxyl derivative reactions: nucleophilic substitution, graft copolymerization, cross-linking reaction, esterification reaction, etherification reaction. |
Figure 3A new method for the preparation of anisotropic cellulose hydrogels induced by calcium ions. (a) Reversible multiphase transformation of Cellulose hydrogels based on Ca2+/Zn2+ exchange and color change of the gel interference under orthogonal polarized light during ion exchange. Adapted with permission from Ref. [71] Copyright 2020, WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim. (b) The schematic diagram of the preparation of a highly oriented cellulose hydrogel by H2O/Ca2+ exchange shows that the flexible switch between ion coordination/hydrogen bond dominance is achieved, thus achieving continuous regulation of a high-oriented structure. (i) The initial gel cross-linked by Ca2+. (ii) The hydrophobic stacking of cellulose chains triggered by water along the length direction to form an aligned structure. (iii) Ca2+ breaks the H-bonds between the cellulose chains and is simultaneously cross-linked with cellulose molecules. (iv) Hydrophobic stacking occurred again when the gel was soaked in water. With the repeated H2O and Ca2+ exchange process, the cellulose molecular chains continued to adjust along the confined direction, resulting in a high orientation structure. Adapted with permission from Ref. [90] Copyright 2020, WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim. (c) Mechanism diagram and microstrain test diagram of gradient anisotropic hydrogel prepared by directional diffusion of cellulose sol in CaCl2 solution. Adapted with permission from Ref. [91] Copyright 2021, Elsevier Ltd.
Figure 4Formation mechanism of hydrogel. (a) A sketch of network formation in cellulose solutions: physical gelation via self-association of chains and chemical cross-linking; (b) a schematic presentation of the structures of physical and chemical cellulose gels; adapted from Ref. [28]. (c) Scheme of the crosslinking between celluloses in the presence of spacers. DVS: divinyl sulfone, cross-linked molecules. (d) Synthesis route of hydrogel by radical polymerization. Adapted with permission from Ref. [99] copyright 2007, Society of Chemical Industry. (e) Formation and structure of semi- and full interpenetrating hydrogels. Adapted with permission from Ref. [103] Copyright 2008, Elsevier Ltd.
Classification of hydrogel crosslinking methods.
| Crosslinking Types | Crosslinking Mechanism | Crosslinking Methods | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Physical | Ions interaction | Based on polyvinyl alcohol, a physical cross-linked network was constructed by coordinating the N-glucosamine unit of chitosan chain with the tridentate ligand of Cit3− anion. | [ |
| Crystalline crosslinking | Crystallization formed in polyethylene glycol chain slip ring gel and melted with elongation and contraction. | [ | |
| Hydrogen bonding crosslinking | Between PVA and Tannic Acid (TA). | [ | |
| Hydrophobic association interaction | Increased side chain length leads to stronger hydrophobic interactions and promotes thicker and denser networks. | [ | |
| Chemical crosslinking | Free radical polymerization | Composite hydrogel formed by in situ radical polymerization of poly-acrylamide/acidified single-walled carbon nanotubes. | [ |
| Radiation polymerization | Polymerization of monomers is initiated by high-energy radiation. | [ | |
| Interpenetrating polymer network | PVA network with high crosslink density (a skeleton restricting the saturated water content of gel) is penetrated by polystyrene sulfonate (PSS) network. | [ |
Figure 5Cellulose-based ionic conductive hydrogel for multi-functional sensors. (a) Schematic illustration of PVA-CNF organohydrogel. (b) Ashby plot of ionic conductivity and tensile stress with other reported ionic conductive (organo) hydrogels. (c) Relative resistance changes and pressure sensitivity of PVA-1%CNF organohydrogels-based sensor at varying pressure. (d) The relative resistance changes of sensors versus time for real-time monitoring of various human motions. Adapted with permission from Ref. [131], WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Figure 6Nanoellulosic hybrid aerogels for thermal insulation. (a) Processing principles and synthesis of the BC–PMSQ hybrid aerogels. (b) Thermal conductivities λ of BC–PMSQ, down feathers, and pure BC membranes. (c) Durable thermal insulation performance was evaluated by optical and infrared images. Adapted with permission from Ref. [132], Copyright 2021, Wiley-VCH GmbH.
Figure 7Cellulose-based hydrogels for wound healing. (a) Design strategy for 2D conductive cellulose nanosheets and their assembly into biostable and conductive 3D bulk hydrogels. (b) BCA content of C2C12 cells on the hydrogels after three days of culturing. (c) Immunofluorescent staining for focal adhesion formation of C2C12 cells on day three. Vinculin, a focal adhesion protein, was stained with green, and cell nuclei were counterstained with blue. (d) Images of hydrogel-treated wounds with and without electrotherapy. Adapted with permission from Ref. [5], Copyright 2021, Wiley-VCH GmbH.