AI Article Synopsis

  • The study creates a tough hydrogel by combining poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate) (pHEMA) with alginate, resulting in a hierarchical nested-network structure that enhances mechanical strength while maintaining high elasticity.
  • The hydrogel exhibits remarkable self-lubrication with low surface friction, comparable to traditional lubricants, and possesses properties such as high hydrophilicity, biocompatibility, and tunable cell adhesion.
  • The developed hydrogel can be easily bonded to silicone substrates through chemical modifications, making it a promising material for various biomedical applications.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: Well-organized composite formations such as hierarchical nested-network (NN) structure in bone tissue and reticular connective tissue present remarkable mechanical strength and play a crucial role in achieving physical and biological functions for living organisms. Inspired by these delicate microstructures in nature, an analogous scaffold of double network hydrogel was fabricated by creating a poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate) (pHEMA) network in the porous structure of alginate hydrogels. The resulting hydrogel possessed hierarchical NN structure and showed significantly improved mechanical strength but still maintained high elasticity comparable to soft tissues due to a mutual strengthening effect between the two networks. The tough hydrogel is also self-lubricated, exhibiting a surface friction coefficient comparable with polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) substrates lubricated by a commercial aqueous lubricant (K-Y Jelly) and other low surface friction hydrogels. Additional properties of this hydrogel include high hydrophilicity, good biocompatibility, tunable cell adhesion and bacterial resistance after incorporation of silver nanoparticles. Firm bonding of the hydrogel on silicone substrates could be achieved through facile chemical modification, thus enabling the use of this hydrogel as a versatile coating material for biomedical applications.

Statement Of Significance: In this study, we developed a tough hydrogel by crosslinking HEMA monomers in alginate hydrogels and forming a well-organized structure of hierarchical nested network (NN). Different from most reported stretchable alginate-based hydrogels, the NN hydrogel shows higher compressive strength but retains comparable softness to alginate counterparts. This work further demonstrated the good integration of the tough hydrogel with silicone substrates through chemical modification and micropillar structures. Other properties including surface friction, biocompatibility and bacterial resistance were investigated and the hydrogel shows a great promise as a versatile coating material for biomedical applications.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2018.02.003DOI Listing

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