Polycaprolactone/silica microporous hybrid membranes were produced in two steps: A microporous polycaprolactone membrane with an interconnected porosity of 80% was obtained via a freeze extraction procedure, then silica was formed by a sol-gel reaction inside the micropores using tetraethyl orthosilicate, TEOS, as silica precursor. It is shown that silica forms a thin coating layer homogeneously distributed over the pore walls when sol-gel reaction is catalyzed by hydrochloric acid, while it forms submicron spherical particles when using basic catalyzer. Some physical properties and the viability and osteoblastic differentiation of bone marrow rat mesenchymal stem cells cultured on pure and hybrid membranes were studied.
ElsevierPlazas Bonilla, CE.; Gómez-Tejedor, JA.; Perilla, JE.; Gómez Ribelles, JL. (2013). Silica phase formed by sol-gel reaction in the nano-and micro-pores of a polymer hydrogel. Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids. 379:12-20. doi:10.1016/j.jnoncrysol.2013. Corresponding author José L. Gómez Ribelles .E-mail address: jlgomez@ter.upv.es
AbstractHybrid composites consisting in a hydrogel matrix with silica micro-and nano-particles reinforcement were produced and characterized. The strategy proposed in this work to obtain these composites consisted in a two-step synthesis, being the polymer network formation the first step. Porous poly(hydroxyethyl acrylate) polymer network was produced via free radical polymerization. Monomer and crosslinker were diluted in a varying amount of ethanol that controls the porosity of the resulting network. Polymeric microstructure drives the absorption of a silica precursor solution and the further distribution of the inorganic phase which was formed "in situ" in part occupying the pores and in part in the form of nanoparticles distributed in the polymer phase.Composites with silica content up to 60% by weight were obtained. In the case where the silica phase was continuous, samples maintained their integrity after eliminating the organic phase by pyrolysis. Water absorbed in the gel was able to crystallize, at least in Clara E. Plazas Bonilla, Journal of Non-Crystaline Solids 379 (2013) 12-20 2 part, when the silica content was below 30% by weight. Interestingly, for higher silica content the glass transition of the polymer phase was suppressed as well. Compliance was determined by indentation experiments. A continuous decrease in compliance was observed as filler content increased. Improvement of bioactivity of the material in simulated body fluid was also assessed. The synthetic route proposed allowed obtaining a family of composite hydrogels with variable properties.
HighlightsA procedure to synthesize an interconnected silica nanophase in a previously formed polymer hydrogel.Silica nano-and micro-domains formed in a polymer nano-and micro-porous hydrogel by a sol-gel reaction.Hybrid materials with up to 60% by weight silica content in which both silica and organic phases are continuous.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.