JOURNAL ARTICLE

Effect of compression on fast swelling of poly(acrylamide‐co‐acrylic acid) superporous hydrogels

Richard A. GemeinhartHaesun ParkKinam Park

Year: 2001 Journal:   Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Vol: 55 (1)Pages: 54-62   Publisher: Wiley

Abstract

Superporous hydrogels (SPHs) swell to a large size in a very short time. In many applications it is preferred to compress SPHs to reduce the overall dimension in the dried state. The effects of compression on the swelling property of SPHs were examined. The swelling property of the compressed SPHs was dependent on the orientation of the SPHs during compression. If SPHs were compressed in an orientated manner so that they retained interconnected porous structure, they were able to swell to near equilibrium within 10 min of immersion in aqueous fluids. If SPHs were compressed in a manner that did not retain the open pore structure, the swelling rate was greatly reduced. The results showed that the SPHs could be compressed without significant sacrifice of the fast swelling property if compressed in a proper orientation. Because pores were formed owing to the generation of gas which rose from bottom to the top of the container, the compression parallel to the pore formation resulted in preservation of the pore structure, and thus fast swelling property. The ability to compress SPHs, maintaining the fast swelling property, is expected to be useful in various applications including development of gastric retention devices for oral drug delivery. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res 55: 54–62, 2001

Keywords:
Swelling Materials science Self-healing hydrogels Composite material Porosity Compression (physics) Compressive strength Polymer chemistry

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Topics

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