Integrated dynamic wet spinning of core-sheath hydrogel fibers for optical-to-brain/tissue communications

Abstract Hydrogel optical light-guides have received substantial interest for applications such as deep-tissue biosensors, optogenetic stimulation and photomedicine due to their biocompatibility, (micro)structure control and tissue-like Young's modulus. However, despite recent developments, lar...

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Veröffentlicht in:National science review 2021-09, Vol.8 (9), p.nwaa209-nwaa209
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Guoyin, Wang, Gang, Tan, Xinrong, Hou, Kai, Meng, Qingshuo, Zhao, Peng, Wang, Shun, Zhang, Jiayi, Zhou, Zhan, Chen, Tao, Cheng, Yanhua, Hsiao, Benjamin S, Reichmanis, Elsa, Zhu, Meifang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Hydrogel optical light-guides have received substantial interest for applications such as deep-tissue biosensors, optogenetic stimulation and photomedicine due to their biocompatibility, (micro)structure control and tissue-like Young's modulus. However, despite recent developments, large-scale fabrication with a continuous synthetic methodology, which could produce core-sheath hydrogel fibers with the desired optical and mechanical properties suitable for deep-tissue applications, has yet to be achieved. In this study, we report a versatile concept of integrated light-triggered dynamic wet spinning capable of continuously producing core-sheath hydrogel optical fibers with tunable fiber diameters, and mechanical and optical propagation properties. Furthermore, this concept also exhibited versatility for various kinds of core-sheath functional fibers. The wet spinning synthetic procedure and fabrication process were optimized with the rational design of the core/sheath material interface compatibility [core = poly(ethylene glycol diacrylate-co-acrylamide); sheath = Ca-alginate], optical transparency, refractive index and spinning solution viscosity. The resulting hydrogel optical fibers exhibited desirable low optical attenuation (0.18 ± 0.01 dB cm−1 with 650 nm laser light), excellent biocompatibility and tissue-like Young's modulus (
ISSN:2095-5138
2053-714X
DOI:10.1093/nsr/nwaa209