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Hydrogel

A hydrogel is a biphasic material, a mixture of porous, permeable solids and at least 10% by weight or volume of interstitial fluid composed completely or mainly by water.[1] In hydrogels the porous permeable solid is a water insoluble three dimensional network of natural or synthetic polymers and a fluid, having absorbed a large amount of water or biological fluids.[2][3][4] These properties underpin several applications, especially in the biomedical area. Many hydrogels are synthetic, but some are derived from nature.[5][6] The term 'hydrogel' was coined in 1894.[7]

Gelatin, here in sheets for cooking, is a hydrogel.
Peptide hydrogel formation shown by the inverted vial method.

Chemistry Edit

Classification Edit

The crosslinks which bond the polymers of a hydrogel fall under two general categories: physical hydrogels and chemical hydrogels. Chemical hydrogels have covalent cross-linking bonds, whereas physical hydrogels have non-covalent bonds.[citation needed] Chemical hydrogels can result in strong reversible or irreversible gels due to the covalent bonding.[8] Chemical hydrogels that contain reversible covalent cross-linking bonds such as hydrogels of thiomers being cross-linked via disulfide bonds are non-toxic and are used in numerous medicinal products.[9][10][11] Physical hydrogels usually have high biocompatibility, are not toxic, and are also easily reversible by simply changing an external stimulus such as pH, ion concentration (alginate) or temperature (gelatine); they are also used for medical applications.[12][13][14][15][16] Physical crosslinks consist of hydrogen bonds, hydrophobic interactions, and chain entanglements (among others). A hydrogel generated through the use of physical crosslinks is sometimes called a 'reversible' hydrogel.[12] Chemical crosslinks consist of covalent bonds between polymer strands. Hydrogels generated in this manner are sometimes called 'permanent' hydrogels.

Hydrogels are prepared using a variety of polymeric materials, which can be divided broadly into two categories according to their origin: natural or synthetic polymers. Natural polymers for hydrogel preparation include hyaluronic acid, chitosan, heparin, alginate, gelatin and fibrin.[17] Common synthetic polymers include polyvinyl alcohol, polyethylene glycol, sodium polyacrylate, acrylate polymers and copolymers thereof.[5] Whereas natural hydrogels are usually non-toxic, and often provides other advantages for medical use, such as biocompatibility, biodegradability, antibiotic/antifungal effect and improve regeneration of nearby tissue, their stability and strength is usually much lower than synthetic hydrogels.[18] There are also synthetic hydrogels than can be used for medical applications, such as polyethylene glycol (PEG), polyacrylate, and polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP).[19]

Preparation Edit

 
Simplified scheme to show the self-assembly process involved in hydrogel formation.

There are two suggested mechanisms behind physical hydrogel formation, the first one being the gelation of nanofibrous peptide assemblies, usually observed for oligopeptide precursors. The precursors self-assemble into fibers, tapes, tubes, or ribbons that entangle to form non-covalent cross-links. The second mechanism involves non-covalent interactions of cross-linked domains that are separated by water-soluble linkers, and this is usually observed in longer multi-domain structures.[20] Tuning of the supramolecular interactions to produce a self-supporting network that does not precipitate, and is also able to immobilize water which is vital for to gel formation. Most oligopeptide hydrogels have a β-sheet structure, and assemble to form fibers, although α-helical peptides have also been reported.[21][22] The typical mechanism of gelation involves the oligopeptide precursors self-assemble into fibers that become elongated, and entangle to form cross-linked gels.

One notable method of initiating a polymerization fuving involves the use of light as a stimulus. In this method, photoinitiators, compounds that cleave from the absorption of photons, are added to the precursor solution which will become the hydrogel. When the precursor solution is exposed to a concentrated source of light, usually ultraviolet irradiation, the photoinitiators will cleave and form free radicals, which will begin a polymerization reaction that forms crosslinks between polymer strands. This reaction will cease if the light source is removed, allowing the amount of crosslinks formed in the hydrogel to be controlled.[23] The properties of a hydrogel are highly dependent on the type and quantity of its crosslinks, making photopolymerization a popular choice for fine-tuning hydrogels. This technique has seen considerable use in cell and tissue engineering applications due to the ability to inject or mold a precursor solution loaded with cells into a wound site, then solidify it in situ.[24][23]

Physically crosslinked hydrogels can be prepared by different methods depending on the nature of the crosslink involved. Polyvinyl alcohol hydrogels are usually produced by the freeze-thawed technique. In this, the solution is frozen for a few hours, then thawed at room temperature, and the cycle is repeated until a strong and stable hydrogel is formed.[25] Alginate hydrogels are formed by ionic interactions between alginate and double-charged cations. A salt, usually calcium chloride, is dissolved into an aqueous sodium alginate solution, that causes the calcium ions to create ionic bonds between alginate chains.[26] Gelatin hydrogels are formed by temperature change. A water solution of gelatin forms an hydrogel at temperatures below 37–35 °C, as Van der Waals interactions between collagen fibers become stronger than thermal molecular vibrations.[27]

Peptides based hydrogels Edit

Peptides based hydrogels possess exceptional biocompatibility and biodegradability qualities, giving rise to their wide use of applications, particularly in biomedicine; as such, their physical properties can be fine-tuned in order to maximise their use. Methods to do this are: modulation of the amino acid sequence, pH, chirality, and increasing the number of aromatic residues.[28] The order of amino acids within the sequence is crucial for gelation, as has been shown many times. In one example, a short peptide sequence Fmoc-Phe-Gly readily formed a hydrogel, whereas Fmoc-Gly-Phe failed to do so as a result of the two adjacent aromatic moieties being moved, hindering the aromatic interactions.[29][30] Altering the pH can also have similar effects, an example involved the use of the naphthalene (Nap) modified dipeptides Nap-Gly-Ala, and Nap- Ala-Gly, where a drop in pH induced gelation of the former, but led to crystallisation of the latter.[31] A controlled pH decrease method using glucono-δ-lactone (GdL), where the GdL is hydrolysed to gluconic acid in water is a recent strategy that has been developed as a way to form homogeneous and reproducible hydrogels.[32][33] The hydrolysis is slow, which allows for a uniform pH change, and thus resulting in reproducible homogenous gels. In addition to this, the desired pH can be achieved by altering the amount of GdL added. The use of GdL has been used various times for the hydrogelation of Fmoc and Nap-dipeptides.[32][33] In another direction, Morris et al reported the use of GdL as a ‘molecular trigger’ to predict and control the order of gelation.[34] Chirality also plays an essential role in gel formation, and even changing the chirality of a single amino acid from its natural L-amino acid to its unnatural D-amino acid can significantly impact the gelation properties, with the natural forms not forming gels.[35] Furthermore, aromatic interactions play a key role in hydrogel formation as a result of π- π stacking driving gelation, shown by many studies.[36][37]

Other Edit

Hydrogels also possess a degree of flexibility very similar to natural tissue due to their significant water content. As responsive "smart materials", hydrogels can encapsulate chemical systems which upon stimulation by external factors such as a change of pH may cause specific compounds such as glucose to be liberated to the environment, in most cases by a gel–sol transition to the liquid state. Chemomechanical polymers are mostly also hydrogels, which upon stimulation change their volume and can serve as actuators or sensors.

Mechanical properties Edit

Hydrogels have been investigated for diverse applications. By modifying the polymer concentration of a hydrogel (or conversely, the water concentration), the Young's modulus, shear modulus, and storage modulus can vary from 10 Pa to 3 MPa, a range of about five orders of magnitude.[39] A similar effect can be seen by altering the crosslinking concentration.[39] This much variability of the mechanical stiffness is why hydrogels are so appealing for biomedical applications, where it is vital for implants to match the mechanical properties of the surrounding tissues.[40] Characterizing the mechanical properties of hydrogels can be difficult especially due to the differences in mechanical behavior that hydrogels have in comparison to other traditional engineering materials. In addition to its rubber elasticity and viscoelasticity, hydrogels have an additional time dependent deformation mechanism which is dependent on fluid flow called poroelasticity. These properties are extremely important to consider while performing mechanical experiments. Some common mechanical testing experiments for hydrogels are tension, compression (confined or unconfined), indentation, shear rheometry or dynamic mechanical analysis.[39]

Hydrogels have two main regimes of mechanical properties: rubber elasticity and viscoelasticity:

Rubber elasticity Edit

In the unswollen state, hydrogels can be modelled as highly crosslinked chemical gels, in which the system can be described as one continuous polymer network. In this case:

 

where G is the shear modulus, k is the Boltzmann constant, T is temperature, Np is the number of polymer chains per unit volume, ρ is the density, R is the ideal gas constant, and   is the (number) average molecular weight between two adjacent cross-linking points.   can be calculated from the swell ratio, Q, which is relatively easy to test and measure.[39]

For the swollen state, a perfect gel network can be modeled as:[39]

 

In a simple uniaxial extension or compression test, the true stress,  , and engineering stress,  , can be calculated as:

 

 

where   is the stretch.[39]

Viscoelasticity Edit

For hydrogels, their elasticity comes from the solid polymer matrix while the viscosity originates from the polymer network mobility and the water and other components that make up the aqueous phase.[41] Viscoelastic properties of a hydrogel is highly dependent on the nature of the applied mechanical motion. Thus, the time dependence of these applied forces is extremely important for evaluating the viscoelasticity of the material.[42]

Physical models for viscoelasticity attempt to capture the elastic and viscous material properties of a material. In an elastic material, the stress is proportional to the strain while in a viscous material, the stress is proportional to the strain rate. The Maxwell model is one developed mathematical model for linear viscoelastic response. In this model, viscoelasticity is modeled analogous to an electrical circuit with a Hookean spring, that represents the Young's modulus, and a Newtonian dashpot that represents the viscosity. A material that exhibit properties described in this model is a Maxwell material. Another physical model used is called the Kelvin-Voigt Model and a material that follow this model is called a Kelvin–Voigt material.[43] In order to describe the time-dependent creep and stress-relaxation behavior of hydrogel, a variety of physical lumped parameter models can be used.[39] These modeling methods vary greatly and are extremely complex, so the empirical Prony Series description is commonly used to describe the viscoelastic behavior in hydrogels.[39]

In order to measure the time-dependent viscoelastic behavior of polymers dynamic mechanical analysis is often performed. Typically, in these measurements the one side of the hydrogel is subjected to a sinusoidal load in shear mode while the applied stress is measured with a stress transducer and the change in sample length is measured with a strain transducer.[42] One notation used to model the sinusoidal response to the periodic stress or strain is:

 

in which G' is the real (elastic or storage) modulus, G" is the imaginary (viscous or loss) modulus.

Poroelasticity Edit

Poroelasticity is a characteristic of materials related to the migration of solvent through a porous material and the concurrent deformation that occurs.[39] Poroelasticity in hydrated materials such as hydrogels occurs due to friction between the polymer and water as the water moves through the porous matrix upon compression. This causes a decrease in water pressure, which adds additional stress upon compression. Similar to viscoelasticity, this behavior is time dependent, thus poroelasticity is dependent on compression rate: a hydrogel shows softness upon slow compression, but fast compression makes the hydrogel stiffer. This phenomenon is due to the friction between the water and the porous matrix is proportional to the flow of water, which in turn is dependent on compression rate. Thus, a common way to measure poroelasticity is to do compression tests at varying compression rates.[44] Pore size is an important factor in influencing poroelasticity. The Kozeny–Carman equation has been used to predict pore size by relating the pressure drop to the difference in stress between two compression rates.[44]

Poroelasticity is described by several coupled equations, thus there are few mechanical tests that relate directly to the poroelastic behavior of the material, thus more complicated tests such as indentation testing, numerical or computational models are utilized. Numerical or computational methods attempt to simulate the three dimensional permeability of the hydrogel network.

Environmental response Edit

The most commonly seen environmental sensitivity in hydrogels is a response to temperature.[45] Many polymers/hydrogels exhibit a temperature dependent phase transition, which can be classified as either an upper critical solution temperature (UCST) or lower critical solution temperature (LCST). UCST polymers increase in their water-solubility at higher temperatures, which lead to UCST hydrogels transitioning from a gel (solid) to a solution (liquid) as the temperature is increased (similar to the melting point behavior of pure materials). This phenomenon also causes UCST hydrogels to expand (increase their swell ratio) as temperature increases while they are below their UCST.[45] However, polymers with LCSTs display an inverse (or negative) temperature-dependence, where their water-solubility decreases at higher temperatures. LCST hydrogels transition from a liquid solution to a solid gel as the temperature is increased, and they also shrink (decrease their swell ratio) as the temperature increases while they are above their LCST.[45]

Applications can dictate for diverse thermal responses. For example, in the biomedical field, LCST hydrogels are being investigated as drug delivery systems due to being injectable (liquid) at room temp and then solidifying into a rigid gel upon exposure to the higher temperatures of the human body.[45] There are many other stimuli that hydrogels can be responsive to, including: pH, glucose, electrical signals, light, pressure, ions, antigens, and more.[45]

Additives Edit

The mechanical properties of hydrogels can be fine-tuned in many ways beginning with attention to their hydrophobic properties.[45][46] Another method of modifying the strength or elasticity of hydrogels is to graft or surface coat them onto a stronger/stiffer support, or by making superporous hydrogel (SPH) composites, in which a cross-linkable matrix swelling additive is added.[6] Other additives, such as nanoparticles and microparticles, have been shown to significantly modify the stiffness and gelation temperature of certain hydrogels used in biomedical applications.[47][48][49]

Processing techniques Edit

While a hydrogel's mechanical properties can be tuned and modified through crosslink concentration and additives, these properties can also be enhanced or optimized for various applications through specific processing techniques. These techniques include electro-spinning, 3D/4D printing, self-assembly, and freeze-casting. One unique processing technique is through the formation of multi-layered hydrogels to create a spatially-varying matrix composition and by extension, mechanical properties. This can be done by polymerizing the hydrogel matrixes in a layer by layer fashion via UV polymerization. This technique can be useful in creating hydrogels that mimic articular cartilage, enabling a material with three separate zones of distinct mechanical properties.[50]

Another emerging technique to optimize hydrogel mechanical properties is by taking advantage of the Hofmeister series. Due to this phenomenon, through the addition of salt solution, the polymer chains of a hydrogel aggregate and crystallize, which increases the toughness of the hydrogel. This method, called "salting out", has been applied to poly(vinyl alcohol) hydrogels by adding a sodium sulfate salt solution.[51] Some of these processing techniques can be used synergistically with each other to yield optimal mechanical properties. Directional freezing or freeze-casting is another method in which a directional temperature gradient is applied to the hydrogel is another way to form materials with anisotropic mechanical properties. Utilizing both the freeze-casting and salting-out processing techniques on poly(vinyl alcohol) hydrogels to induce hierarchical morphologies and anisotropic mechanical properties.[52] Directional freezing of the hydrogels helps to align and coalesce the polymer chains, creating anisotropic array honeycomb tube-like structures while salting out the hydrogel yielded out a nano-fibril network on the surface of these honeycomb tube-like structures. While maintaining a water content of over 70%, these hydrogels' toughness values are well above those of water-free polymers such as polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), Kevlar, and synthetic rubber. The values also surpass the toughness of natural tendon and spider silk.[52]

Applications Edit

Soft contact lenses Edit

 
Molecular structure of silicone hydrogel used in flexible, oxygen-permeable contact lenses.[53]

The dominant material for contact lenses are acrylate-siloxane hydrogels. They have replaced hard contact lenses. One of their most attractive properties is oxygen permeability, which is required since the cornea lacks vasculature.

Research Edit

 
Human mesenchymal stem cell interacting with 3D hydrogel - imaged with label-free live cell imaging
 
An adhesive bandage with a hydrogel pad, used for blisters and burns. The central gel is clear, the adhesive waterproof plastic film is clear, the backing is white and blue.
  • Coatings for gas evolution reaction electrodes for efficient bubble detachment [54][55][56]
  • Breast implants
  • Contact lenses (silicone hydrogels, polyacrylamides, polymacon)
  • Water sustainability: Hydrogels have emerged as promising materials platforms for solar-powered water purification,[57] water disinfection,[58] and Atmospheric water generator.[59]
  • Disposable diapers where they absorb urine, or in sanitary napkins[24]
  • Dressings for healing of burn or other hard-to-heal wounds. Wound gels are excellent for helping to create or maintain a moist environment.
  • EEG and ECG medical electrodes using hydrogels composed of cross-linked polymers (polyethylene oxide, polyAMPS and polyvinylpyrrolidone)
  • Encapsulation of quantum dots
  • Environmentally sensitive hydrogels (also known as 'smart gels' or 'intelligent gels'). These hydrogels have the ability to sense changes of pH, temperature, or the concentration of metabolite and release their load as result of such a change.[60][61][62]
  • Fibers
  • Glue
  • Granules for holding soil moisture in arid areas
  • Air bubble-repellent (superaerophobicity). Can improve the performance and stability of electrodes for water electrolysis.[63]
  • Culturing cells: Hydrogel-coated wells have been used for cell culture.[64]
  • Biosensors: Hydrogels that are responsive to specific molecules,[65] such as glucose or antigens, can be used as biosensors, as well as in DDS.[66]
  • Cell carrier: Injectable hydrogels can be used to carry drugs or cells for applications in tissue regeneration or 3D bioprinting.[67][68][69] Hydrogels with reversible chemistry are required to allow for fluidization during injection/printing followed by self-healing of the original hydrogel structure.[70]
  • Investigate cell biomechanical functions combined with holotomography microscopy
  • Provide absorption, desloughing and debriding of necrotic and fibrotic tissue
  • Tissue engineering scaffolds. When used as scaffolds, hydrogels may contain human cells to repair tissue. They mimic 3D microenvironment of cells.[71] Materials include agarose, methylcellulose, hyaluronan, elastin-like polypeptides, and other naturally derived polymers.
  • Sustained-release drug delivery systems. Ionic strength, pH and temperature can be used as a triggering factor to control the release of the drug.[72]
  • Window coating/replacement: Hydrogels are under consideration for reducing infrared light absorption by 75%.[73] Another approach reduced interior temperature using a temperature-responsive hydrogel.[74]
  • Thermodynamic electricity generation: When combined with ions allows for heat dissipation for electronic devices and batteries and converting the heat exchange to an electrical charge.[75]
  • Water gel explosives
  • Controlled release of agrochemicals (pesticides and fertilizer)
  • Talin Shock Absorbing Materials - protein-based hydrogels that can absorb supersonic impacts[76]

Biomaterials Edit

Implanted or injected hydrogels have the potential to support tissue regeneration by mechanical tissue support, localized drug or cell delivery, local cell recruitement or immunomodulation, or encapsulation of nanoparticles for local photothermal or brachytherapy.[70] Polymeric drug delivery systems have overcome challenge due to their biodegradability, biocompatibility, and anti-toxicity.[77][78] Materials such as collagen, chitosan, cellulose, and poly (lactic-co-glycolic acid) have been implemented extensively for drug delivery to organs such as eye,[79] nose, kidneys,[80] lungs,[81] intestines,[82] skin[83] and brain. Future work is focused on reducing toxicity, improving biocompatibility, expanding assembly techniques[84]

Hydrogels have been considered as vehicles for drug delivery.[85][67][68][69] They can also be made to mimic animal mucosal tissues to be used for testing mucoadhesive properties.[86][87] They have been examined for use as reservoirs in topical drug delivery; particularly ionic drugs, delivered by iontophoresis.

References Edit

  This article incorporates text by Jessica Hutchinson available under the CC BY 3.0 license.

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Further reading Edit

  • Warren DS, Sutherland SP, Kao JY, et al. (2017). "The Preparation and Simple Analysis of a Clay Nanoparticle Composite Hydrogel". Journal of Chemical Education. 94 (11): 1772–1779. Bibcode:2017JChEd..94.1772W. doi:10.1021/acs.jchemed.6b00389. ISSN 0021-9584.

hydrogel, hydrogel, biphasic, material, mixture, porous, permeable, solids, least, weight, volume, interstitial, fluid, composed, completely, mainly, water, hydrogels, porous, permeable, solid, water, insoluble, three, dimensional, network, natural, synthetic,. A hydrogel is a biphasic material a mixture of porous permeable solids and at least 10 by weight or volume of interstitial fluid composed completely or mainly by water 1 In hydrogels the porous permeable solid is a water insoluble three dimensional network of natural or synthetic polymers and a fluid having absorbed a large amount of water or biological fluids 2 3 4 These properties underpin several applications especially in the biomedical area Many hydrogels are synthetic but some are derived from nature 5 6 The term hydrogel was coined in 1894 7 Gelatin here in sheets for cooking is a hydrogel Peptide hydrogel formation shown by the inverted vial method Contents 1 Chemistry 1 1 Classification 1 2 Preparation 1 3 Peptides based hydrogels 1 4 Other 2 Mechanical properties 2 1 Rubber elasticity 2 2 Viscoelasticity 2 3 Poroelasticity 2 4 Environmental response 2 5 Additives 2 6 Processing techniques 3 Applications 3 1 Soft contact lenses 3 2 Research 3 3 Biomaterials 4 References 5 Further readingChemistry EditClassification Edit The crosslinks which bond the polymers of a hydrogel fall under two general categories physical hydrogels and chemical hydrogels Chemical hydrogels have covalent cross linking bonds whereas physical hydrogels have non covalent bonds citation needed Chemical hydrogels can result in strong reversible or irreversible gels due to the covalent bonding 8 Chemical hydrogels that contain reversible covalent cross linking bonds such as hydrogels of thiomers being cross linked via disulfide bonds are non toxic and are used in numerous medicinal products 9 10 11 Physical hydrogels usually have high biocompatibility are not toxic and are also easily reversible by simply changing an external stimulus such as pH ion concentration alginate or temperature gelatine they are also used for medical applications 12 13 14 15 16 Physical crosslinks consist of hydrogen bonds hydrophobic interactions and chain entanglements among others A hydrogel generated through the use of physical crosslinks is sometimes called a reversible hydrogel 12 Chemical crosslinks consist of covalent bonds between polymer strands Hydrogels generated in this manner are sometimes called permanent hydrogels Hydrogels are prepared using a variety of polymeric materials which can be divided broadly into two categories according to their origin natural or synthetic polymers Natural polymers for hydrogel preparation include hyaluronic acid chitosan heparin alginate gelatin and fibrin 17 Common synthetic polymers include polyvinyl alcohol polyethylene glycol sodium polyacrylate acrylate polymers and copolymers thereof 5 Whereas natural hydrogels are usually non toxic and often provides other advantages for medical use such as biocompatibility biodegradability antibiotic antifungal effect and improve regeneration of nearby tissue their stability and strength is usually much lower than synthetic hydrogels 18 There are also synthetic hydrogels than can be used for medical applications such as polyethylene glycol PEG polyacrylate and polyvinylpyrrolidone PVP 19 Preparation Edit nbsp Simplified scheme to show the self assembly process involved in hydrogel formation There are two suggested mechanisms behind physical hydrogel formation the first one being the gelation of nanofibrous peptide assemblies usually observed for oligopeptide precursors The precursors self assemble into fibers tapes tubes or ribbons that entangle to form non covalent cross links The second mechanism involves non covalent interactions of cross linked domains that are separated by water soluble linkers and this is usually observed in longer multi domain structures 20 Tuning of the supramolecular interactions to produce a self supporting network that does not precipitate and is also able to immobilize water which is vital for to gel formation Most oligopeptide hydrogels have a b sheet structure and assemble to form fibers although a helical peptides have also been reported 21 22 The typical mechanism of gelation involves the oligopeptide precursors self assemble into fibers that become elongated and entangle to form cross linked gels One notable method of initiating a polymerization fuving involves the use of light as a stimulus In this method photoinitiators compounds that cleave from the absorption of photons are added to the precursor solution which will become the hydrogel When the precursor solution is exposed to a concentrated source of light usually ultraviolet irradiation the photoinitiators will cleave and form free radicals which will begin a polymerization reaction that forms crosslinks between polymer strands This reaction will cease if the light source is removed allowing the amount of crosslinks formed in the hydrogel to be controlled 23 The properties of a hydrogel are highly dependent on the type and quantity of its crosslinks making photopolymerization a popular choice for fine tuning hydrogels This technique has seen considerable use in cell and tissue engineering applications due to the ability to inject or mold a precursor solution loaded with cells into a wound site then solidify it in situ 24 23 Physically crosslinked hydrogels can be prepared by different methods depending on the nature of the crosslink involved Polyvinyl alcohol hydrogels are usually produced by the freeze thawed technique In this the solution is frozen for a few hours then thawed at room temperature and the cycle is repeated until a strong and stable hydrogel is formed 25 Alginate hydrogels are formed by ionic interactions between alginate and double charged cations A salt usually calcium chloride is dissolved into an aqueous sodium alginate solution that causes the calcium ions to create ionic bonds between alginate chains 26 Gelatin hydrogels are formed by temperature change A water solution of gelatin forms an hydrogel at temperatures below 37 35 C as Van der Waals interactions between collagen fibers become stronger than thermal molecular vibrations 27 Peptides based hydrogels Edit Peptides based hydrogels possess exceptional biocompatibility and biodegradability qualities giving rise to their wide use of applications particularly in biomedicine as such their physical properties can be fine tuned in order to maximise their use Methods to do this are modulation of the amino acid sequence pH chirality and increasing the number of aromatic residues 28 The order of amino acids within the sequence is crucial for gelation as has been shown many times In one example a short peptide sequence Fmoc Phe Gly readily formed a hydrogel whereas Fmoc Gly Phe failed to do so as a result of the two adjacent aromatic moieties being moved hindering the aromatic interactions 29 30 Altering the pH can also have similar effects an example involved the use of the naphthalene Nap modified dipeptides Nap Gly Ala and Nap Ala Gly where a drop in pH induced gelation of the former but led to crystallisation of the latter 31 A controlled pH decrease method using glucono d lactone GdL where the GdL is hydrolysed to gluconic acid in water is a recent strategy that has been developed as a way to form homogeneous and reproducible hydrogels 32 33 The hydrolysis is slow which allows for a uniform pH change and thus resulting in reproducible homogenous gels In addition to this the desired pH can be achieved by altering the amount of GdL added The use of GdL has been used various times for the hydrogelation of Fmoc and Nap dipeptides 32 33 In another direction Morris et al reported the use of GdL as a molecular trigger to predict and control the order of gelation 34 Chirality also plays an essential role in gel formation and even changing the chirality of a single amino acid from its natural L amino acid to its unnatural D amino acid can significantly impact the gelation properties with the natural forms not forming gels 35 Furthermore aromatic interactions play a key role in hydrogel formation as a result of p p stacking driving gelation shown by many studies 36 37 Other Edit Hydrogels also possess a degree of flexibility very similar to natural tissue due to their significant water content As responsive smart materials hydrogels can encapsulate chemical systems which upon stimulation by external factors such as a change of pH may cause specific compounds such as glucose to be liberated to the environment in most cases by a gel sol transition to the liquid state Chemomechanical polymers are mostly also hydrogels which upon stimulation change their volume and can serve as actuators or sensors source source A micropump based on a hydrogel bar 4 0 3 0 05 mm size actuated by applied voltage This pump can be continuously operated with a 1 5 V battery for at least 6 months 38 nbsp A short peptide based hydrogel matrix capable of holding about one hundred times its own weight in water Developed as a medical dressing nbsp Photo of the same short peptide based hydrogel held in forceps to demonstrate its stiffness and transparency Mechanical properties EditHydrogels have been investigated for diverse applications By modifying the polymer concentration of a hydrogel or conversely the water concentration the Young s modulus shear modulus and storage modulus can vary from 10 Pa to 3 MPa a range of about five orders of magnitude 39 A similar effect can be seen by altering the crosslinking concentration 39 This much variability of the mechanical stiffness is why hydrogels are so appealing for biomedical applications where it is vital for implants to match the mechanical properties of the surrounding tissues 40 Characterizing the mechanical properties of hydrogels can be difficult especially due to the differences in mechanical behavior that hydrogels have in comparison to other traditional engineering materials In addition to its rubber elasticity and viscoelasticity hydrogels have an additional time dependent deformation mechanism which is dependent on fluid flow called poroelasticity These properties are extremely important to consider while performing mechanical experiments Some common mechanical testing experiments for hydrogels are tension compression confined or unconfined indentation shear rheometry or dynamic mechanical analysis 39 Hydrogels have two main regimes of mechanical properties rubber elasticity and viscoelasticity Rubber elasticity Edit In the unswollen state hydrogels can be modelled as highly crosslinked chemical gels in which the system can be described as one continuous polymer network In this case G N p k T r R T M c displaystyle G N p kT rho RT over overline M c nbsp where G is the shear modulus k is the Boltzmann constant T is temperature Np is the number of polymer chains per unit volume r is the density R is the ideal gas constant and M c displaystyle overline M c nbsp is the number average molecular weight between two adjacent cross linking points M c displaystyle overline M c nbsp can be calculated from the swell ratio Q which is relatively easy to test and measure 39 For the swollen state a perfect gel network can be modeled as 39 G swollen G Q 1 3 displaystyle G textrm swollen GQ 1 3 nbsp In a simple uniaxial extension or compression test the true stress s t displaystyle sigma t nbsp and engineering stress s e displaystyle sigma e nbsp can be calculated as s t G swollen l 2 l 1 displaystyle sigma t G textrm swollen left lambda 2 lambda 1 right nbsp s e G swollen l l 2 displaystyle sigma e G textrm swollen left lambda lambda 2 right nbsp where l l current l original displaystyle lambda l textrm current l textrm original nbsp is the stretch 39 Viscoelasticity Edit For hydrogels their elasticity comes from the solid polymer matrix while the viscosity originates from the polymer network mobility and the water and other components that make up the aqueous phase 41 Viscoelastic properties of a hydrogel is highly dependent on the nature of the applied mechanical motion Thus the time dependence of these applied forces is extremely important for evaluating the viscoelasticity of the material 42 Physical models for viscoelasticity attempt to capture the elastic and viscous material properties of a material In an elastic material the stress is proportional to the strain while in a viscous material the stress is proportional to the strain rate The Maxwell model is one developed mathematical model for linear viscoelastic response In this model viscoelasticity is modeled analogous to an electrical circuit with a Hookean spring that represents the Young s modulus and a Newtonian dashpot that represents the viscosity A material that exhibit properties described in this model is a Maxwell material Another physical model used is called the Kelvin Voigt Model and a material that follow this model is called a Kelvin Voigt material 43 In order to describe the time dependent creep and stress relaxation behavior of hydrogel a variety of physical lumped parameter models can be used 39 These modeling methods vary greatly and are extremely complex so the empirical Prony Series description is commonly used to describe the viscoelastic behavior in hydrogels 39 In order to measure the time dependent viscoelastic behavior of polymers dynamic mechanical analysis is often performed Typically in these measurements the one side of the hydrogel is subjected to a sinusoidal load in shear mode while the applied stress is measured with a stress transducer and the change in sample length is measured with a strain transducer 42 One notation used to model the sinusoidal response to the periodic stress or strain is G G i G displaystyle G G iG nbsp in which G is the real elastic or storage modulus G is the imaginary viscous or loss modulus Poroelasticity Edit Poroelasticity is a characteristic of materials related to the migration of solvent through a porous material and the concurrent deformation that occurs 39 Poroelasticity in hydrated materials such as hydrogels occurs due to friction between the polymer and water as the water moves through the porous matrix upon compression This causes a decrease in water pressure which adds additional stress upon compression Similar to viscoelasticity this behavior is time dependent thus poroelasticity is dependent on compression rate a hydrogel shows softness upon slow compression but fast compression makes the hydrogel stiffer This phenomenon is due to the friction between the water and the porous matrix is proportional to the flow of water which in turn is dependent on compression rate Thus a common way to measure poroelasticity is to do compression tests at varying compression rates 44 Pore size is an important factor in influencing poroelasticity The Kozeny Carman equation has been used to predict pore size by relating the pressure drop to the difference in stress between two compression rates 44 Poroelasticity is described by several coupled equations thus there are few mechanical tests that relate directly to the poroelastic behavior of the material thus more complicated tests such as indentation testing numerical or computational models are utilized Numerical or computational methods attempt to simulate the three dimensional permeability of the hydrogel network Environmental response Edit The most commonly seen environmental sensitivity in hydrogels is a response to temperature 45 Many polymers hydrogels exhibit a temperature dependent phase transition which can be classified as either an upper critical solution temperature UCST or lower critical solution temperature LCST UCST polymers increase in their water solubility at higher temperatures which lead to UCST hydrogels transitioning from a gel solid to a solution liquid as the temperature is increased similar to the melting point behavior of pure materials This phenomenon also causes UCST hydrogels to expand increase their swell ratio as temperature increases while they are below their UCST 45 However polymers with LCSTs display an inverse or negative temperature dependence where their water solubility decreases at higher temperatures LCST hydrogels transition from a liquid solution to a solid gel as the temperature is increased and they also shrink decrease their swell ratio as the temperature increases while they are above their LCST 45 Applications can dictate for diverse thermal responses For example in the biomedical field LCST hydrogels are being investigated as drug delivery systems due to being injectable liquid at room temp and then solidifying into a rigid gel upon exposure to the higher temperatures of the human body 45 There are many other stimuli that hydrogels can be responsive to including pH glucose electrical signals light pressure ions antigens and more 45 Additives Edit The mechanical properties of hydrogels can be fine tuned in many ways beginning with attention to their hydrophobic properties 45 46 Another method of modifying the strength or elasticity of hydrogels is to graft or surface coat them onto a stronger stiffer support or by making superporous hydrogel SPH composites in which a cross linkable matrix swelling additive is added 6 Other additives such as nanoparticles and microparticles have been shown to significantly modify the stiffness and gelation temperature of certain hydrogels used in biomedical applications 47 48 49 Processing techniques Edit While a hydrogel s mechanical properties can be tuned and modified through crosslink concentration and additives these properties can also be enhanced or optimized for various applications through specific processing techniques These techniques include electro spinning 3D 4D printing self assembly and freeze casting One unique processing technique is through the formation of multi layered hydrogels to create a spatially varying matrix composition and by extension mechanical properties This can be done by polymerizing the hydrogel matrixes in a layer by layer fashion via UV polymerization This technique can be useful in creating hydrogels that mimic articular cartilage enabling a material with three separate zones of distinct mechanical properties 50 Another emerging technique to optimize hydrogel mechanical properties is by taking advantage of the Hofmeister series Due to this phenomenon through the addition of salt solution the polymer chains of a hydrogel aggregate and crystallize which increases the toughness of the hydrogel This method called salting out has been applied to poly vinyl alcohol hydrogels by adding a sodium sulfate salt solution 51 Some of these processing techniques can be used synergistically with each other to yield optimal mechanical properties Directional freezing or freeze casting is another method in which a directional temperature gradient is applied to the hydrogel is another way to form materials with anisotropic mechanical properties Utilizing both the freeze casting and salting out processing techniques on poly vinyl alcohol hydrogels to induce hierarchical morphologies and anisotropic mechanical properties 52 Directional freezing of the hydrogels helps to align and coalesce the polymer chains creating anisotropic array honeycomb tube like structures while salting out the hydrogel yielded out a nano fibril network on the surface of these honeycomb tube like structures While maintaining a water content of over 70 these hydrogels toughness values are well above those of water free polymers such as polydimethylsiloxane PDMS Kevlar and synthetic rubber The values also surpass the toughness of natural tendon and spider silk 52 Applications EditSoft contact lenses Edit nbsp Molecular structure of silicone hydrogel used in flexible oxygen permeable contact lenses 53 The dominant material for contact lenses are acrylate siloxane hydrogels They have replaced hard contact lenses One of their most attractive properties is oxygen permeability which is required since the cornea lacks vasculature Research Edit nbsp Human mesenchymal stem cell interacting with 3D hydrogel imaged with label free live cell imaging nbsp An adhesive bandage with a hydrogel pad used for blisters and burns The central gel is clear the adhesive waterproof plastic film is clear the backing is white and blue Coatings for gas evolution reaction electrodes for efficient bubble detachment 54 55 56 Breast implants Contact lenses silicone hydrogels polyacrylamides polymacon Water sustainability Hydrogels have emerged as promising materials platforms for solar powered water purification 57 water disinfection 58 and Atmospheric water generator 59 Disposable diapers where they absorb urine or in sanitary napkins 24 Dressings for healing of burn or other hard to heal wounds Wound gels are excellent for helping to create or maintain a moist environment EEG and ECG medical electrodes using hydrogels composed of cross linked polymers polyethylene oxide polyAMPS and polyvinylpyrrolidone Encapsulation of quantum dots Environmentally sensitive hydrogels also known as smart gels or intelligent gels These hydrogels have the ability to sense changes of pH temperature or the concentration of metabolite and release their load as result of such a change 60 61 62 Fibers Glue Granules for holding soil moisture in arid areas Air bubble repellent superaerophobicity Can improve the performance and stability of electrodes for water electrolysis 63 Culturing cells Hydrogel coated wells have been used for cell culture 64 Biosensors Hydrogels that are responsive to specific molecules 65 such as glucose or antigens can be used as biosensors as well as in DDS 66 Cell carrier Injectable hydrogels can be used to carry drugs or cells for applications in tissue regeneration or 3D bioprinting 67 68 69 Hydrogels with reversible chemistry are required to allow for fluidization during injection printing followed by self healing of the original hydrogel structure 70 Investigate cell biomechanical functions combined with holotomography microscopy Provide absorption desloughing and debriding of necrotic and fibrotic tissue Tissue engineering scaffolds When used as scaffolds hydrogels may contain human cells to repair tissue They mimic 3D microenvironment of cells 71 Materials include agarose methylcellulose hyaluronan elastin like polypeptides and other naturally derived polymers Sustained release drug delivery systems Ionic strength pH and temperature can be used as a triggering factor to control the release of the drug 72 Window coating replacement Hydrogels are under consideration for reducing infrared light absorption by 75 73 Another approach reduced interior temperature using a temperature responsive hydrogel 74 Thermodynamic electricity generation When combined with ions allows for heat dissipation for electronic devices and batteries and converting the heat exchange to an electrical charge 75 Water gel explosives Controlled release of agrochemicals pesticides and fertilizer Talin Shock Absorbing Materials protein based hydrogels that can absorb supersonic impacts 76 Biomaterials Edit Implanted or injected hydrogels have the potential to support tissue regeneration by mechanical tissue support localized drug or cell delivery local cell recruitement or immunomodulation or encapsulation of nanoparticles for local photothermal or brachytherapy 70 Polymeric drug delivery systems have overcome challenge due to their biodegradability biocompatibility and anti toxicity 77 78 Materials such as collagen chitosan cellulose and poly lactic co glycolic acid have been implemented extensively for drug delivery to organs such as eye 79 nose kidneys 80 lungs 81 intestines 82 skin 83 and brain Future work is focused on reducing toxicity improving biocompatibility expanding assembly techniques 84 Hydrogels have been considered as vehicles for drug delivery 85 67 68 69 They can also be made to mimic animal mucosal tissues to be used for testing mucoadhesive properties 86 87 They have been examined for use as reservoirs in topical drug delivery particularly ionic drugs delivered by iontophoresis 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2819712 PMID 19216632 Cook MT Smith SL Khutoryanskiy VV October 2015 Novel glycopolymer hydrogels as mucosa mimetic materials to reduce animal testing Chemical Communications 51 77 14447 14450 doi 10 1039 C5CC02428E PMID 26221632 Cook MT Khutoryanskiy VV November 2015 Mucoadhesion and mucosa mimetic materials A mini review International Journal of Pharmaceutics 495 2 991 998 doi 10 1016 j ijpharm 2015 09 064 hdl 2299 16856 PMID 26440734 Further reading EditWarren DS Sutherland SP Kao JY et al 2017 The Preparation and Simple Analysis of a Clay Nanoparticle Composite Hydrogel Journal of Chemical Education 94 11 1772 1779 Bibcode 2017JChEd 94 1772W doi 10 1021 acs jchemed 6b00389 ISSN 0021 9584 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hydrogel amp oldid 1177098554, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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