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A family of injectable poly(N-isopropyl acrylamide) (PNIPAAm) copolymer hydrogels has been fabricated in order to tune mechanical properties to support load-bearing function and dimensional recovery for possible use as load-bearing medical devices, such as a nucleus pulposus replacement for the intervertebral disc. PNIPAAm-polyethylene glycol (PEG) copolymers were synthesized with varying hydrophilic PEG concentrations as grafted or branched structures to enhance dimensional recovery of the materials. Polymerizations were confirmed with attenuated total reflectance-Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy studies. Incorporation of PEG was effective in raising water content of pure PNIPAAm hydrogels (29.3% water for pure PNIPAAm vs. 47.7% for PEG branches and 39.5% for PEG grafts). PNIPAAm with 7% grafted as well as 7% branched PEG had significantly reduced compressive modulus compared to that of pure PNIPAAm. Initially recovered compressive strain was significantly increased for 7% PEG branches after pre-testing immersion in PBS for up to 33 days, while 7% PEG grafts decreased this value. Sample height recovery for pure PNIPAAm was limited to 31.6%, while PNIPAAm with 7% branches was increased to 71.3%. When mechanically tested samples were allowed to recover without load over 30 min, each composition was able to significantly recover height, indicating that the time to recovery is slower than the unloading rates typically used in testing. While the incorporation of hydrophilic PEG was expected to alter the mechanical behavior of the hydrogels, only the branched form was able to significantly enhance dimensional recovery.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2009.10.024 | DOI Listing |
J Colloid Interface Sci
August 2025
Department of Materials, University of Manchester, Nancy Rothwell Building, Manchester M1 7HL, UK. Electronic address:
Hypothesis: Poly(N-isopropylacryamide) microgels (PNIPAM MGs) are interesting model colloids with remarkable self-ordering properties. Metal halide perovskites (MHPs) are solution processable semiconductors that have attracted great interest for optoelectronics applications. Very few studies have considered complex co-crystallizing systems and their effects on structural order formation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolymers (Basel)
July 2025
Chemical Engineering Department, Institute for Materials Research and Innovation, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, Lafayette, LA 70504, USA.
Osteoarthritis and metastatic bone cancers create pathological oxidative environments characterized by elevated reactive oxygen species (ROS). ROS impair bone regeneration by degrading the scaffold and suppressing mineralization. To address these challenges, we fabricated thermoresponsive scaffolds based on poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAAm) incorporating in situ-grown nanohydroxyapatite on graphene oxide nanoscrolls (nHA-GONS) using stereolithography (SLA).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiosensors (Basel)
June 2025
Chemistry and Nanoscience Major, College of Chemistry and Life Sciences, Myongji University, 116 Myongji-ro, Yongin-si 17058, Republic of Korea.
Hydrogels are three-dimensional network structures composed of hydrophilic polymers that can swell in water and are very similar to soft tissues such as connective tissue or the extracellular matrix. DNA hydrogels are particularly notable for biomedical applications due to their high biocompatibility, physiological stability, molecular recognition, biodegradability, easy functionalization, and low immunogenicity. Based on these advantages, stimuli-responsive DNA hydrogels that have the property of reversibly changing their structure in response to various microenvironments or molecules are attracting attention as smart nanomaterials that can be applied to biosensing and material transfer, such as in the case of cells and drugs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnal Chim Acta
May 2025
Polymer and Biomaterials Chemistry Laboratory, Department of Chemistry and Biosciences, University of Bradford, Bradford, BD7 1DP, United Kingdom. Electronic address:
Question: This paper studies the importance of resolving 'in-solution' viscosity to determine an accurate hydrodynamic radii for high molar mass or high dispersity macromolecules via DOSY NMR. Analysis of polymer size via diffusion NMR has become increasingly more common, however as in-solution viscosity increases NMR output becomes more complex and requires dedicated methodologies (both in the instrumentation and data treatment) that can sufficiently resolve slowly diffusing analytes.
Results: Diffusion measurements were used to determine hydrodynamic radii of dissolved polymer chains of materials across a broad molar mass range in multiple solvents.
Soft Matter
April 2025
Institute for Condensed Matter Physics, Technische Universität Darmstadt, Hochschulstraße 6, 64289 Darmstadt, Germany.
Although the thermoresponsive polymer poly(-isopropylacrylamide) (pNIPAM) is well soluble in both ethanol and water, it shows a miscibility gap in ethanol-water mixtures, an effect termed cononsolvency. We use H and O nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) together with appropriate isotope labelling to selectively study reorientation dynamics of ethanol and water related to the cononsolvency effect over the whole range of solvent compositions from pure ethanol to pure water. At low ethanol concentrations (≤30 vol%), spin-lattice () and spin-spin () relaxation times show a step-like decrease when heating across the lower critical solution temperature for the respective solvent composition.
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