Poly(N-vinyl caprolactam) (PVCL) hydrogels usually
suffer from the imporous structure and poor mechanical characteristics
as well as the toxicity of cross-linkers, although PVCL itself is
biocompatible. In this paper, novel biocompatible thermoresponsive
poly(N-vinyl caprolactam)/clay nanocomposite (PVCL-Clay)
hydrogels with macroporous structure and improved mechanical characteristics
are developed for the first time. The macroporosity in the hydrogel
is introduced by using Pickering emulsions as templates, which contain N-vinyl caprolactam (VCL) monomer as dispersed phase and
clay sheets as stabilizers at the interface. After polymerization,
macropores are formed inside the hydrogels with the residual unreacted
VCL droplets as templates. The three-dimensional PVCL polymer networks
are cross-linked by the clay nanosheets. Due to the nanocomposite
structure, the hydrogel exhibits better mechanical characteristics
in comparison to the conventional PVCL hydrogels cross-linked by N,N′-methylene diacrylamide (BIS).
The prepared PVCL-Clay hydrogel possesses remarkable temperature-responsive
characteristics with a volume phase transition temperature (VPTT)
around 35 °C, and provides a feasible platform for cell culture.
With macroporous structure and good mechanical characteristics as
well as flexible assembly performance, the proposed biocompatible
thermoresponsive PVCL-Clay nanocomposite hydrogels are ideal material
candidates for biomedical, analytical, and other applications such
as entrapment of enzymes, cell culture, tissue engineering, and affinity
and displacement chromatography.