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Article Abstract

Mussel-inspired adhesive hydrogels have been developed in biomedical fields due to their strong adhesive property, cohesive capability, biocompatibility, and hemostatic ability. Catechol-functionalized chitosan is a potential polymer used to prepare adhesive hydrogels. However, the unique gelation mechanism and self-healing properties of catechol-grafted chitosan alone have not yet been explored. Herein, catechol-grafted chitosan (CC) was synthesized and further concentrated to obtain the self-healing CC hydrogels. The gelation mechanism of CC hydrogels may be attributed to the formation of hydrogen bonding, cation-π interactions, Michael addition, or Schiff base reactions during concentration phases. Rheological studies showed that the CC hydrogel owned self-healing properties in repeated damage-healing cycles. Coherent small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) analyses revealed the formation of a mesoscale structure (~9 nm) as the solid content of the hydrogel increased. In situ SAXS combined with rheometry verified the strain-dependent behavior of the CC hydrogel. The CC hydrogel displayed the osmotic-responsive behavior and enhanced adhesive strength (0.38 N/cm) after immersion in the physiological saline. The CC scaffold prepared by lyophilizing the CC hydrogel revealed a macroporous structure (~200 µm), a high swelling ratio (9656%), good compressibility, and durability. This work provides an insight into the design of using chitosan-catechol alone to produce hydrogels or scaffolds with tunable mechanical properties for further applications in biomedical fields.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9653763PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14214614DOI Listing

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