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Pore collapse during the fabrication process of rubber‐like polymer scaffolds
Author(s) -
Diego Raúl Brígido,
Ribelles José Luis Gómez,
Sánchez Manuel Salmerón
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
journal of applied polymer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.575
H-Index - 166
eISSN - 1097-4628
pISSN - 0021-8995
DOI - 10.1002/app.25202
Subject(s) - polymer , materials science , fabrication , porosity , dissolution , swelling , polymer network , template , composite material , solvent , matrix (chemical analysis) , natural rubber , chemical engineering , polymer architecture , process (computing) , polymer chemistry , nanotechnology , chemistry , organic chemistry , computer science , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology , engineering , operating system
Rubbery polymer scaffolds for tissue engineering were produced using templates of the pore structure. The last step in the fabrication process consists of dissolving the template using a solvent that, at the same time, swells the scaffolding matrix that was a polymer network. Sometimes the polymer matrix is stretched so strongly that when the solvent is eliminated, i.e., the network is dried, it shrinks and is not able to recover its original shape and, consequently, the porous structure collapses. In this work we prepared, using the same fabrication process (the same template and the same solvent), a series of polymer scaffolds that results in collapsed or noncollapsed porous structures, depending on the polymer network composition. We explain the collapse process as a consequence of the huge volume increase in the swelling process during the template extraction due to the large distance between crosslinking points in the scaffolding matrix. By systematically increasing the crosslinking density the porous structure remains after network drying and the final interconnected pores were observed. It is shown that this problem does not take place when the scaffolding matrix consists of a glassy polymer network. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 104: 1475–1481, 2007

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