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Fabrication of polylactic acid/polyethylene glycol ( PLA / PEG ) porous scaffold by supercritical CO 2 foaming and particle leaching
Author(s) -
Chen BinYi,
Jing Xin,
Mi HaoYang,
Zhao Haibin,
Zhang WenHao,
Peng XiangFang,
Turng LihSheng
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
polymer engineering and science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.503
H-Index - 111
eISSN - 1548-2634
pISSN - 0032-3888
DOI - 10.1002/pen.24073
Subject(s) - materials science , polylactic acid , porosity , interconnectivity , polyethylene glycol , peg ratio , chemical engineering , supercritical fluid , biocompatibility , leaching (pedology) , composite material , polymer , chemistry , organic chemistry , metallurgy , environmental science , finance , artificial intelligence , soil water , computer science , soil science , engineering , economics
PLA/PEG/NaCl blends were melt‐blended followed by gas foaming and particle leaching process to fabricate porous scaffold with high porosity and interconnectivity. A home‐made triple‐screw compounding extruder was used to intensify the mixability and dispersion of NaCl and PEG in the PLA matrix. Supercritical carbon dioxide was used as physical blowing agent for the microcellular foaming process. Sodium chloride (NaCl) was used as the porogen to further improve the porosity of PLA scaffold. This study investigated the effects of PEG and NaCl on the structure and properties of the PLA‐based blend, as well as the porosity, pore size, interconnectivity, and hydrophilicity of porous scaffolds. It was found that the incorporation of PEG and NaCl significantly improved the crystallization rate and reduced viscoelasticity of PLA. Moreover, scaffolds obtained from PLA/PEG/NaCl blends had an interconnected bimodal porous structure with the open‐pore content about 86% and the highest porosity of 80%. And the presence of PEG in PLA/NaCl composite improved the extraction ability of NaCl particles during leaching process, which resulted in a well‐interconnected structure. The biocompatibility of the porous scaffolds fabricated was verified by culturing fibroblast cells for 10 days. POLYM. ENG. SCI., 55:1339–1348, 2015. © 2015 Society of Plastics Engineers

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