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Photocrosslinked poly(ester‐anhydride) microspheres with macroporous structure
Author(s) -
Jaszcz Katarzyna
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
polymers for advanced technologies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.61
H-Index - 90
eISSN - 1099-1581
pISSN - 1042-7147
DOI - 10.1002/pat.3159
Subject(s) - photoinitiator , materials science , porosity , emulsion , polymer , chemical engineering , solvent , microsphere , copolymer , polymer chemistry , evaporation , composite material , organic chemistry , chemistry , monomer , physics , engineering , thermodynamics
In this work, the new method of preparation biodegradable microspheres with macroporous structure is presented. Typical methods used for generation of porous structures in microspheres obtained from preformed polymers require the use of additional substances acting as porogens. In this study, the porosity was achieved as the effect of photocrosslinking, without porogens. Microspheres were prepared using emulsion solvent evaporation technique from functional poly(ester‐anhydride)s with different amount of allyl groups in the side chains. The crosslinking was carried out by UV irradiation during the solvent evaporation (photoinitiator was introduced to polymer solution). The size of microspheres obtained was in the range of 1.7 – 4 µm (small microspheres) or 31 – 50 µm (large ones) and depended on the conditions used in emulsion formulation process. Effectiveness of the crosslinking was characterized by the content of insoluble part of samples, and it was in the range of 42–89%. The content of insoluble part of sample of microspheres and their porosity were dependent on functionality of poly(ester‐anhydride)s, the amount of photoinitiator used, and also on size of microparticles. The small particles were always more crosslinked than the large ones, but the latter were more porous than the small ones. Crosslinked microparticles indicated higher loading efficiency of model compound and appeared to degrade faster than uncrosslinked ones, probably due to their high porosity. The high porosity of microspheres obtained would enable their eventual use in pulmonary drug delivery systems or in construction of porous scaffolds for tissue engineering. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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