Cross-Linked Polymeric Gels and Nanocomposites: New Materials and Phenomena Enabling Technological Applications
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (i)
- Gels can be formed by homopolymerization or copolymerization of any acrylamide, and the relative reactivity of the comonomers is always the same, whatever is the functional group attached to the amide.
- (ii)
- Any acrylamide can be polymerized (together with a cross-linker) into a solid hydrogel using the same initiator (e.g., APS/TEMED).
- (iii)
- The incorporation of a linear conductive polymer inside the gel by in situ polymerization produces a semi-interpenetrated network.
- (iv)
- The swelling of the hydrogel intake water and ions dissolved in it, in the same concentration as in solution. Conversely, if the gel collapses (e.g., by reaching LCST), water is expelled and the ions are loaded inside.
- (v)
- If the gel contains fixed charged groups, the mobile counterions are taken into the network and the co-ions are excluded (Donnan exclusion).
- (vi)
- Macroporous hydrogels are mechanically weaker than their nanoporous counterparts due to the lower percentage of solid material.
- (vii)
- Gels, as solids, have defined interfaces with the solution.
- (viii)
- Hydrogels swell in water and similar solvents (e.g., alcohols) but not in low-polarity solvents (e.g., chloroform).
- (ix)
- Loading of substances to be released has to be performed from aqueous solution, even for molecules almost insoluble in water.
- (x)
- It is not possible to trap biological entities (enzymes, cells) by in situ radical polymerization/gelation since radicals themselves and/or acrylamides themselves are deleterious to those entities.
2. Summary of Experimental Procedures
2.1. Macroscopic Gels
2.1.1. Nanoporous
2.1.2. Macroporous
Directional Cryogelation
Gas Templating
2.2. Thin Films
2.3. Nanoparticles
2.3.1. Nanogels
2.3.2. Smart Nanoparticles Stabilized by Polyacrylamides
2.3.3. Block Copolymers of Acrylamides and Anilines
2.4. Microparticles
2.5. Nanocomposites
2.5.1. With Metallic Nanoparticles
2.5.2. With Conductive Polymer Nanoparticles
Filling the Pores by In Situ Polymerization/Precipitation
Trapping of Preformed Nanoparticles
2.5.3. Graphene
2.5.4. Carbon Nanotubes
2.5.5. Enzymes
2.5.6. Yeast Cells
2.6. Semi-Interpenetrated Networks (s-IPN)
2.7. Microscopy
2.8. Absorption of Solvents, Equilibrium, and Kinetics
2.9. Porosity
2.10. Lower Critical Solution Temperature (LCST)
2.11. Mechanical Properties
2.12. Contact Angle
2.13. Biocompatibility/Toxicity
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Fabrication of Different Shapes/Forms
3.1.1. Nanoporous Gels
3.1.2. Macroporous Gels
3.1.3. Thin Films and Submicrometric Structures
3.1.4. Nanogels and Microgels
3.1.5. Gels as Nanocomposite Matrixes
3.1.6. True Semi-Interpenetrated Networks (s-IPN)
3.2. Tuning the Physicochemical Properties of the Gels
3.2.1. Swelling in Water
3.2.2. Swelling in Nonaqueous Solvents (and Mixtures)
3.2.3. Lower Critical Solution Temperatures (LCST)
3.2.4. Solute Partition
3.2.5. Mass Transport of Mobile Species
Mechanical Properties
3.2.6. Hydrophilicity
3.2.7. Photothermomechanical Behavior
3.3. Applications
3.3.1. Drug Release
3.3.2. Actuators
3.3.3. Sensors
3.3.4. Biological Systems
3D Cell Scaffolds
Immobilization of Bioactive Agents
Cell Adhesion Surfaces
Carriers for Active Principles
Antimicrobial Gels
4. Conclusions
5. Future Studies and Endeavors
6. Patents
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Glossary of Abbreviations
2-MeTHF | 2-methyltetrahydrofuran |
4-ATF | 4-aminothiophenol |
AA | acrylic acid |
AAm | acrylamide |
ACN | acetonitrile |
AMPS | 2-acrylamido-2-methylpropanesulfonic acid |
AMY | α-amylase |
AMY@PAAm-GO | α-amylose in PAAm-GO |
ANI | aniline |
APTMAC | (3-acrylamidopropyl)trimethylammonium chloride |
BPhen | bathophenanthroline |
CP | conducting polymer |
DAMAC | diallyldimethylammonium chloride |
DLIP | direct laser interference patterning |
DLS | dynamic light scattering |
DMF | dimethylformamide |
GO | graphene oxide |
HBT | human body temperature |
HEA | N-hydroxyethylacrylamide |
HMA | N-acryloyl-tris-(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane |
HPC | hydroxypropylcellulose |
IgY | egg yolk immunoglobulin |
LCST | lower critical solution temperature |
MMA | methylmethacrylate |
MTT | 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide |
MWNTs | multiwall carbon nanotubes |
NAT | N-[Tris(hydroxymethyl)methyl]acrylamide |
NIPAM | N-isopropylacrylamide |
NIR | near infrared |
NMP | N-methylpyrrolidone |
PAAm | polyacrylamide |
PANI | polyaniline |
Pc | partition coefficient |
PC | propylene carbonate |
PEDOT | poly(ethylenedioxythiophene) |
Phen | phenanthroline |
PMMA | poly(methylmethacrylate) |
PNMANI | poly(N-methylaniline) |
PNNDMA | poly(N,N-dimethylacrylamide) |
PPy | polypyrrole |
rGO | reduced graphene oxide |
Rubipy | Ru(bypyridine)32+ |
SDS | sodium dodecyl sulfate |
SEM | scanning electron microscopy |
s-IPN | semi-interpenetrating network |
SPAN 80 | sorbitan monooleate |
TAA+ | tetraalkylammonium ion |
TEMED | N,N,N′,N′-tetramethylethylenediamine |
TPB− | tetraphenylborate |
VOC | volatile organic contaminant |
Appendix A
Mixture | xwater | xEtOH | xtoluene |
---|---|---|---|
M1 | 0.6341 | 0.3539 | 0.01 |
M2 | 0.446 | 0.504 | 0.05 |
M3 | 0.3375 | 0.5625 | 0.1 |
M4 | 0.2603 | 0.5397 | 0.2 |
M5 | 0.1048 | 0.3952 | 0.5 |
M7 | 0.0404 | 0.2696 | 0.7 |
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Structures | Fabrication Method | Applications | Refs |
---|---|---|---|
Nanoporous gel | Radical polymerization with cross-linkers | Thermosensitive gels Cell growth scaffolds Amphiphilic gels Electrochemical sensors | [7,10,11,15,30,31,33,38] |
s-IPN | Absorption of true polymer solution | Photothermomechanical actuators Pressure sensors | [19] |
Macroporous gel | Cryogelation | Biological cell scaffold Absorption of nanoparticles | [12,20,22] |
Macroporous nanocomposite | Swelling the macroporous gel in a dispersion of the nanomaterial. | Photothermomechanical actuators | [12] |
Microparticles | Radical polymerization inside water in oil emulsions | Self-assembled monolayers with cell-like fusion | [60] |
Nanoparticles | Controlled nucleation and growth polymerization with charged comonomer (e.g., AMPS) | Thermosensitive dispersions | [60,61] |
Nanocomposites | In situ formation of nanomaterial (metal, CP) inside the gel | Bactericide (Ag NPs) Pressure sensor (CP) | [13,29,36,43] |
Nanocomposites | Formation of gel around the nanomaterial (CP nanoparticles, graphene) | Pressure sensors Photothermal bactericide films Protective carrier of bioactive compounds | [17,18] |
Composition (% in Feed) | Nanoporous | Macroporous | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
NIPAM | Comonomer | wnf (%) | wf (%) | wnf (%) | wf (%) |
100 | 0 | 34.5 | 62.9 | 18.5 | 76.9 |
90 | HMA (10%) | 60.3 | 30.5 | 50.6 | 45.4 |
98 | AMPS (2%) | 55.1 | 42.7 | 2.4 | 94.7 |
Composition (% in Feed) | Elasticity Modulus (kPa) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
NIPAM | Comonomer | Nanoporous | Macroporous (Collinear) | Macroporous (Transversal) |
100 | 0 | 5.9 | 33.3 | 10.9 |
90 | HMA (10%) | 5.9 | 3.1 | 3.1 |
98 | AMPS (2%) | 6.6 | 20.5 | 12.1 |
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Barbero, C.A.; Martínez, M.V.; Acevedo, D.F.; Molina, M.A.; Rivarola, C.R. Cross-Linked Polymeric Gels and Nanocomposites: New Materials and Phenomena Enabling Technological Applications. Macromol 2022, 2, 440-475. https://doi.org/10.3390/macromol2030028
Barbero CA, Martínez MV, Acevedo DF, Molina MA, Rivarola CR. Cross-Linked Polymeric Gels and Nanocomposites: New Materials and Phenomena Enabling Technological Applications. Macromol. 2022; 2(3):440-475. https://doi.org/10.3390/macromol2030028
Chicago/Turabian StyleBarbero, Cesar A., María V. Martínez, Diego F. Acevedo, María A. Molina, and Claudia R. Rivarola. 2022. "Cross-Linked Polymeric Gels and Nanocomposites: New Materials and Phenomena Enabling Technological Applications" Macromol 2, no. 3: 440-475. https://doi.org/10.3390/macromol2030028