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Hydrophobically-Modified PEG Hydrogels with Controllable Hydrophilic/Hydrophobic Balance

37

Citations

39

References

2021

Year

Abstract

This work reports on a novel method to synthesize hydrophobically-modified hydrogels by curing epoxy monomers with amines. The resulting networks contain hydrophilic poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) segments, poly(propylene glycol) (PPG) segments, and C<sub>18</sub> alkyl segments. By varying the content of C<sub>18</sub> segments, networks with different hydrophilic-lipophilic balance (HLB) are obtained. All networks show an amphiphilic behavior, swelling considerably both in organic solvents and in aqueous media. In the latter they display a thermosensitive behavior, which is highly affected by the network HLB and the pH of the solution. A decrease in HLB results in an increment of the polymer weight content (w<sub>p</sub>) due to hydrophobic association. Furthermore, a reduction in HLB induces a remarkable increase in initial modulus, elongation at break and tensile strength, especially when w<sub>p</sub> becomes greater than about 10%. Low field nuclear magnetic resonance (LF-NMR) experiments evidence that, when HLB decreases, a sudden and considerable increase in hydrogel heterogeneity takes place due to occurrence of extensive physical crosslinking. Available data suggest that in systems with w<sub>p</sub> ≳ 10% a continuous physical network superimposes to the pre-existing chemical network and leads to a sort of double network capable of considerably improving hydrogel toughness.

References

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