A Study of Physical and Covalent Hydrogels Containing pH-Responsive Microgel Particles and Graphene Oxide
Author(s) -
Zhengxing Cui,
Amir H. Milani,
Paula J. Greensmith,
Junfeng Yan,
Daman J. Adlam,
Judith A. Hoyland,
Ian A. Kinloch,
Anthony J. Freemont,
Brian R. Saunders
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
langmuir
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.042
H-Index - 333
eISSN - 1520-5827
pISSN - 0743-7463
DOI - 10.1021/la5032015
Subject(s) - dynamic mechanical analysis , oxide , methacrylic acid , materials science , chemical engineering , self healing hydrogels , rheology , acrylate , methacrylate , dynamic modulus , elastic modulus , glass transition , graphene , composite number , polymer chemistry , modulus , polymer , chemistry , composite material , nanotechnology , copolymer , engineering , metallurgy
In this study we mixed low concentrations of graphene oxide (GO) with microgel (MG) particles and formed composite doubly cross-linked microgels (DX MG/GO) gels. The MG particles comprised poly(ethyl acrylate-co-methacrylic acid-co-1,4-butanediol diacrylate) with pendant glycidyl methacrylate units. The MG/GO mixed dispersions formed physical gels of singly cross-linked MGs (termed SX MG/GO), which were subsequently heated to produce DX MG/GO gels by free-radical reaction. The influence of the GO concentration on the mechanical properties of the SX MG/GO and DX MG/GO gels was investigated using dynamic rheology and static compression measurements. The SX MG/GO physical gels were injectable and moldable. The moduli for the DX MG/GO gels increased by a factor of 4-6 when only ca. 1.0 wt % of GO was included. The isostrain model was used to describe the variation of modulus with DX MG/GO composition. Inclusion of GO dramatically altered the stress dissipation and yielding mechanisms for the gels. GO acted as a high surface area, high modulus filler and played an increasing role in load distribution as the GO concentration increased. It is proposed that MG domains were dispersed within a percolated GO network. Comparison of the modulus data with those published for GO-free DX MGs showed that inclusion of GO provided an unprecedented rate of modulus increase with network volume fraction for this family of colloid gels. Furthermore, the DX MG/GO gels were biocompatible and the results imply that there may be future applications of these new systems as injectable load supporting gels for soft tissue repair.
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