posted on 2017-01-17, 13:37authored byLaura
J. Macdougall, Vinh X. Truong, Andrew P. Dove
Synthetic hydrogel materials offer
the ability to tune the mechanical
properties of the resultant networks by controlling the molecular
structure of the polymer precursors. Herein, we demonstrate that the
nucleophilic thiol-yne click reaction presents a highly efficient
chemistry for forming robust high water content (ca. 90%) hydrogel
materials with tunable stiffness and mechanical properties. Remarkably,
optimization of the molecular weight and geometry of the poly(ethylene
glycol) (PEG) precursors allows access to materials with compressive
strength up to 2.4 MPa, which can be repeatedly compressed to >90%
stress. Beyond this, we demonstrate the ability to access hydrogels
with storage moduli ranging from 0.2 to 7 kPa. Moreover, we also demonstrate
that by a simple precursor blending process, we can access intermediate
stiffness across this range with minimal changes to the hydrogel structure.
These characteristics present the nucleophilic thiol-yne addition
as an excellent method for the preparation of hydrogels for use as
versatile synthetic biomaterials.