AI Article Synopsis

  • Hydrogels significantly influence tissue engineering, drug delivery, and materials science, but swelling may lead to internal stresses and potential rupture.
  • Most mechanical characterization studies on hydrogels focus on unswollen or fully swollen states, neglecting the dynamic swelling process where failures can occur.
  • This research examines rupture events in poly(ethylene glycol) networks during swelling, revealing a three-stage fracture process and how network modifications can help control this behavior.

Article Abstract

Hydrogels have had a profound impact in the fields of tissue engineering, drug delivery, and materials science as a whole. Due to the network architecture of these materials, imbibement with water often results in uniform swelling and isotropic expansion which scales with the degree of cross-linking. However, the development of internal stresses during swelling can have dramatic consequences, leading to surface instabilities as well as rupture or bursting events. To better understand hydrogel behavior, macroscopic mechanical characterization techniques (e.g. tensile testing, rheometry) are often used, however most commonly these techniques are employed on samples that are in two distinct states: (1) unswollen and without any solvent, or (2) in an equilibrium swelling state where the maximum amount of water has been imbibed. Rarely is the dynamic process of swelling studied, especially in samples where rupture or failure events are observed. To address this gap, here we focus on rupture events in poly(ethylene glycol)-based networks that occur in response to swelling with water. Rupture events were visualized using high-speed imaging, and the influence of swelling on material properties was characterized using dynamic mechanical analysis. We find that rupture events follow a three-stage process that includes a waiting period, a slow fracture period, and a final stage in which a rapid increase in the velocity of crack propagation is observed. We describe this fracture behavior based on changes in material properties that occur during swelling, and highlight how this rupture behavior can be controlled by straight-forward modifications to the hydrogel network structure.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0sm01718cDOI Listing

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