Influence of natural and synthetic crosslinking reagents on the structural and mechanical properties of chitosan-based hybrid hydrogels
•The molecular structures of CS/PVA/GEN and CS/PVA/GA hybrid hydrogels were determined.•The CS/PVA blend overshooting effect is inhibited using GA and GEN as crosslinkers.•CS/PVA/GEN and CS/PVA/GA hydrogels exhibited similar physicochemical properties.•GA and GEN reduced the crystallinity but increa...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Carbohydrate polymers 2016-10, Vol.151, p.1073-1081 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •The molecular structures of CS/PVA/GEN and CS/PVA/GA hybrid hydrogels were determined.•The CS/PVA blend overshooting effect is inhibited using GA and GEN as crosslinkers.•CS/PVA/GEN and CS/PVA/GA hydrogels exhibited similar physicochemical properties.•GA and GEN reduced the crystallinity but increased the Tg temperature of the CS/PVA.•GEN and GA increased the elastic modulus of the hydrogels by up to 10-fold.
The objective of this work was to correlate the physical and chemical properties of chitosan/poly(vinyl alcohol)/genipin (CS/PVA/GEN) and chitosan/poly(vinyl alcohol)/glutaraldehyde (CS/PVA/GA) hydrogels with their structural and mechanical responses. In addition, their molecular structures were determined and confirmed using FTIR spectroscopy. The results indicated that the hybrid hydrogels crosslinked with genipin showed similar crystallinity, thermal properties, elongation ratio and structural parameters as those crosslinked with glutaraldehyde. However, it was found that the elastic moduli of the two hybrid hydrogels were slightly different: 2.82±0.33MPa and 2.08±0.11MPa for GA and GEN, respectively. Although the hybrid hydrogels crosslinked with GEN presented a lower elastic modulus, the main advantage is that GEN is five to ten thousand times less cytotoxic than GA. This means that the structural and mechanical properties of hybrid hydrogels crosslinked with GEN can easily be tuned and could have potential applications in the tissue engineering, regenerative medicine, food, agriculture and environmental industries. |
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ISSN: | 0144-8617 1879-1344 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.carbpol.2016.06.036 |