JOURNAL ARTICLE

2.5D Hierarchical Structuring of Nanocomposite Hydrogel Films Containing Cellulose Nanocrystals

Kevin J. De FranceMouhanad BabiJaana VapaavuoriTodd HoareJose Moran‐MirabalEmily D. Cranston

Year: 2019 Journal:   ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces Vol: 11 (6)Pages: 6325-6335   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

Although two-dimensional hydrogel thin films have been applied across many biomedical applications, creating higher dimensionality structured hydrogel interfaces would enable potentially improved and more biomimetic hydrogel performance in biosensing, bioseparations, tissue engineering, drug delivery, and wound healing applications. Herein, we present a new and simple approach to control the structure of hydrogel thin films in 2.5D. Hybrid suspensions containing cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) and aldehyde- or hydrazide-functionalized poly(oligoethylene glycol methacrylate) (POEGMA) were spin-coated onto prestressed polystyrene substrates to form cross-linked hydrogel thin films. The films were then structured via thermal shrinking, with control over the direction of shrinking leading to the formation of biaxial, uniaxial, or hierarchical wrinkles. Notably, POEGMA-only hydrogel thin films (without CNCs) did not form uniform wrinkles due to partial dewetting from the substrate during shrinking. Topographical feature sizes of CNC-POEGMA films could be tuned across 2 orders of magnitude (from ∼300 nm to 20 μm) by varying the POEGMA concentration, the length of poly(ethylene glycol) side chains in the polymer, and/or the overall film thickness. Furthermore, by employing adhesive masks during the spin-coating process, structured films with gradient wrinkle sizes can be fabricated. This precise control over both wrinkle size and wrinkle topography adds a level of functionality that to date has been lacking in conventional hydrogel networks.

Keywords:
Materials science Nanocomposite Cellulose Structuring Nanocrystal Nanotechnology Chemical engineering

Metrics

33
Cited By
2.29
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
69
Refs
0.87
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Advanced Cellulose Research Studies
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Biomaterials
Advanced Materials and Mechanics
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanical Engineering
Liquid Crystal Research Advancements
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials

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