Nowadays, despite significant advances in the field of biomaterials for tissue engineering applications, novel bone substituents still need refinement so they can be successfully implemented into the medical treatment of bone fractures. Generally, a scaffold made of synthetic polymer blended with nanofillers was proven to be a very promising biomaterial for tissue engineering, however the choice of components for the said scaffold remains questionable. The objects of the presented study were novel composites consisting of poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL) and two types of graphene materials: graphene oxide (GO) and partially reduced graphene oxide (rGO). The technique of choice, that was used to characterize the obtained composites, was Raman micro-spectroscopy. It revealed that the composite PCL/GO differs substantially from the PCL/rGO composite. The incorporation of the GO particles into the polymer influenced the structure organisation of the polymeric matrix more significantly than rGO. The crystallinity parameters confirmed that the level of crystallinity is generally higher in the PCL/GO membrane in comparison to PCL/rGO (and even in raw PCL) that leads to the conclusion that the GO acts as a nucleation agent enhancing the crystallization of PCL. Interestingly, the characteristics of the studied nanofillers, for example: the level of the organisation (D/G ratio) and the in-plane size of the nano-crystallites (La) almost do not differ. However, they have an ability to influence polymeric matrix differently.
Modern medical treatment can be improved by nanotechnology methods for preparing nanocomposites with novel physical, chemical and biological properties. The materials studied and analysed as membranes were produced from poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL), which contained identical amounts of nano-additives, either montmorillonite (MMT) or functionalized multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNT-f), while the reference membranes were obtained from unmodified PCL. In addition to the conventional methods used in the study of materials for medical purposes such as DSC, contact angle measurements, surface topography, Raman spectroscopy was also applied. Raman microspectroscopy can decode the phenomenon that occurs in the polymer in contact with the nanoparticles. Besides identifying the vibrations of certain functional groups, the calculation of crystallinity parameters is also possible, by which the most intense interactions within the nanocomposites can be analysed. The Raman studies indicate that each of the nano-additives reacts differently with the polymer matrix, which results in material properties that influence its biological properties. MWCNT-f interacts preferentially with the oxygen-containing groups, and particularly with the backbone regions in the vicinity of the single CO bond. The human osteoblast-like MG-63 cells, cultured on the PCL/MWCNT-f membrane for three days, show almost 100% viability.
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