2005
DOI: 10.1002/macp.200400524
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Hydrolytic Degradation of Double Crystalline PPDX‐b‐PCL Diblock Copolymers

Abstract: Summary: The degradation behavior of the diblock copolymers PPDX‐b‐PCL was studied under in vitro conditions, in samples with high PPDX content. Molded films were immersed in phosphate buffer solution at pH = 7.4 and 37 °C for 9 months. The samples were periodically extracted, dried and evaluated by weighing, SEC, 1H NMR, DSC, and POM. The results point out that an increase in PCL content reduced the weight loss in the diblock copolymers. 1H NMR and DSC analysis showed that degradation occurred almost exclusiv… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…In the cases of double crystalline diblock copolymers, such as PEO‐ b ‐PCL, PLLA‐ b ‐PCL, PCL‐ b ‐PPDX, and PLLA ‐b ‐PEG, interdigitated or intercalated structures are widely accepted, and they manifest themselves by different scattering peaks corresponding to each lamellar type. The absence of scattering peaks caused by PTMO lamellae in this study can be attributed to the multiblock structure and the polydispersity of each block.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In the cases of double crystalline diblock copolymers, such as PEO‐ b ‐PCL, PLLA‐ b ‐PCL, PCL‐ b ‐PPDX, and PLLA ‐b ‐PEG, interdigitated or intercalated structures are widely accepted, and they manifest themselves by different scattering peaks corresponding to each lamellar type. The absence of scattering peaks caused by PTMO lamellae in this study can be attributed to the multiblock structure and the polydispersity of each block.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are also in‐depth studies about other kinds of double crystalline copolymers, such as polycaprolactone‐ b ‐poly( p ‐dioxanone) (PCL‐ b ‐PPDX) and poly( L ‐lactide)‐ b ‐ poly(ethylene glycol) (PLLA‐ b ‐PEG) . However, the cited reports of double crystalline systems have mainly focused on well‐defined linear diblock copolymers.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The hydrolytic degradation process of PDO starts with the random scission of the ester bond in backbone chain, followed by changes in mass (by dissolving degradation by‐products into the surrounding medium) . The relatively slow weight loss at the initial step may be related to the early stage of degradation (up to 8 weeks; weight remaining, ∼80%), when random chain scissions occurred but the degraded PDO chains were still too long for solubilization in the PBS . From the degradation behavior, we could expect that the PDO/Pluronic F127 porous particles may be an appropriate bone graft for matching the healing profile of bone which is completed during 6–12 weeks …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The additional advantage of designing biodegradable SMPs would be to prevent the discomfort of a follow-on surgery. New polymers have been synthesized with this concept in mind, including phase segregated multiblock copolymers whose starting materials are proven biocompatible monomers, such as ε-caprolactone and p-dioxanone [44,45,60]. Generally, these materials have at least two separated phases, each with thermal transition (glass or melting) temperatures.…”
Section: Shape-memory Gelsmentioning
confidence: 99%