Selective deposition of polymers at the surface of an ionic hydrogel is conventionally used to tailor properties of the composite material for application within for instance drug release and cell encapsulation. Here we describe a method for determination of the mechanical properties of a thin polymer film deposited on an ionic hydrogel core. The ionic strength-dependent hydrogel swelling is affected by the crosslink density and thickness of the deposited polymer layer. A hemi-ellipsoidal geometry of the hydrogel, corresponding to that employed in proof-of-concept experiments, is used to enforce biaxial deformation of the deposited layer when the ionic hydrogel core is equilibrated at various ionic strengths. The ionic strength dependent equilibrium swelling ratio of the hydrogel with deposited polymer film is modeled using a finite element approach. The free energy of the hydrogel core includes contributions accounting for the polymer mixing, the elastic deformation of the network and the Donnan equilibrium. The latter type of contribution is not included in the neutral thin layer in the present study. Adding the polymer multilayer/shell at the surface reveals that the ionic strength-dependent swelling constraint is more pronounced the thicker and stiffer the film is. Combining thickness measurements of the polymer film with high resolution interferometric determination of reduction in swelling capacity of ionic hydrogels, an equivalent elastic property of the polymer layer is obtained using inverse finite element analysis. In the proof-of-concept experiments, analysis of data obtained for chitosan-alginate multilayers composed of four and eight polymer bilayers deposited on anionic acrylamide-based hydrogel core suggest that these bilayers show an elastic stiffness one order of magnitude larger than the one of the hydrogel core.
Finite element modeling applied to analyze experimentally determined hydrogel swelling data provides quantitative description of the hydrogel in the aqueous solutions with well-defined ionic content and environmental parameters. In the present study, we expand this strategy to analysis of swelling of hydrogels over an extended concentration of salt where the Donnan contribution and specific ion effects are dominating at different regimes. Dynamics and equilibrium swelling were determined for acrylamide and cationic acrylamide-based hydrogels by high-resolution interferometry technique for step-wise increase in NaCl and NaBr concentration up to 2 M. Although increased hydrogel swelling volume with increasing salt concentration was the dominant trend for the uncharged hydrogel, the weakly charged cationic hydrogel was observed to shrink for increasing salt concentration up to 0.1 M, followed by swelling at higher salt concentrations. The initial shrinking is due to the ionic equilibration accounted for by a Donnan term. Comparison of the swelling responses at high NaCl and NaBr concentrations between the uncharged and the cationic hydrogel showed similar specific ion effects. This indicates that the ion non-specific Donnan contribution and specific ion effects are additive in the case where they are occurring in well separated ranges of salt concentration. We develop a novel finite element model including both these mechanisms to account for the observed swelling in aqueous salt solution. In particular, a salt-specific, concentration-dependent Flory–Huggins parameter was introduced for the specific ion effects. This is the first report on finite element modeling of hydrogels including specific ionic effects and underpins improvement of the mechanistic insight of hydrogel swelling that can be used to predict its response to environmental change.
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