pH-dependent nanodiamonds enhance the mechanical properties of 3D-printed hyaluronic acid nanocomposite hydrogels

Abstract Nanocomposite hydrogels capable of undergoing manufacturing process have recently attracted attention in biomedical applications due to their desired mechanical properties and high functionality. 3D printing nanocomposite hydrogels of hyaluronic acid (HA)/nanodiamond (ND) revealed that the...

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Main Authors: Dae Gon Lim, Eunah Kang, Seong Hoon Jeong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-06-01
Series:Journal of Nanobiotechnology
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12951-020-00647-w
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spelling doaj-b106b84914814b7b92cff46224ff1eb42020-11-25T03:37:40ZengBMCJournal of Nanobiotechnology1477-31552020-06-0118111010.1186/s12951-020-00647-wpH-dependent nanodiamonds enhance the mechanical properties of 3D-printed hyaluronic acid nanocomposite hydrogelsDae Gon Lim0Eunah Kang1Seong Hoon Jeong2College of Pharmacy, Dongguk University-SeoulSchool of Chemical Engineering and Material Science, Chung-Ang UniversityCollege of Pharmacy, Dongguk University-SeoulAbstract Nanocomposite hydrogels capable of undergoing manufacturing process have recently attracted attention in biomedical applications due to their desired mechanical properties and high functionality. 3D printing nanocomposite hydrogels of hyaluronic acid (HA)/nanodiamond (ND) revealed that the addition of ND with the low weight ratio of 0.02 wt% resulted in higher compressive force and gel breaking point, compared with HA only nanocomposites. These HA nanocomposite hydrogels loaded with surface functionalized ND allowed for the enforced compressive stress to be tuned in a pH-dependent manner. HA nanocomposite hydrogels with ND-OH at pH 8 showed an increase of 1.40-fold (0.02%: 236.18 kPa) and 1.37-fold (0.04%: 616.72 kPa) the compressive stress at the composition of 0.02 wt% and 0.04 wt, respectively, compared to those of ND-COOH (0.02%: 168.31 kPa, 0.04%: 449.59 kPa) at the same pH. Moreover, the compressive stress of HA/ND-OH (0.04 wt%) at pH 8 was mechanically enhanced 1.29-fold, compared to that of HA/ND-OH (0.04 wt%) at pH 7. These results indicate that the tunable buffering environment and interaction with the long chains of HA at the molecular level have a critical role in the dependency of the mechanical properties on pH. Due to the pH stability of the ND-OH nanophase, filament-based processing and layer-based deposition at microscale attained enforced mechanical properties of hydrogel. Fine surface tuning of the inorganic ND nanophase and controlled 3D printing leads to improved control over the pH-dependent mechanical properties of the nanocomposite hydrogels reported herein.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12951-020-00647-w
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dae Gon Lim
Eunah Kang
Seong Hoon Jeong
spellingShingle Dae Gon Lim
Eunah Kang
Seong Hoon Jeong
pH-dependent nanodiamonds enhance the mechanical properties of 3D-printed hyaluronic acid nanocomposite hydrogels
Journal of Nanobiotechnology
author_facet Dae Gon Lim
Eunah Kang
Seong Hoon Jeong
author_sort Dae Gon Lim
title pH-dependent nanodiamonds enhance the mechanical properties of 3D-printed hyaluronic acid nanocomposite hydrogels
title_short pH-dependent nanodiamonds enhance the mechanical properties of 3D-printed hyaluronic acid nanocomposite hydrogels
title_full pH-dependent nanodiamonds enhance the mechanical properties of 3D-printed hyaluronic acid nanocomposite hydrogels
title_fullStr pH-dependent nanodiamonds enhance the mechanical properties of 3D-printed hyaluronic acid nanocomposite hydrogels
title_full_unstemmed pH-dependent nanodiamonds enhance the mechanical properties of 3D-printed hyaluronic acid nanocomposite hydrogels
title_sort ph-dependent nanodiamonds enhance the mechanical properties of 3d-printed hyaluronic acid nanocomposite hydrogels
publisher BMC
series Journal of Nanobiotechnology
issn 1477-3155
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Abstract Nanocomposite hydrogels capable of undergoing manufacturing process have recently attracted attention in biomedical applications due to their desired mechanical properties and high functionality. 3D printing nanocomposite hydrogels of hyaluronic acid (HA)/nanodiamond (ND) revealed that the addition of ND with the low weight ratio of 0.02 wt% resulted in higher compressive force and gel breaking point, compared with HA only nanocomposites. These HA nanocomposite hydrogels loaded with surface functionalized ND allowed for the enforced compressive stress to be tuned in a pH-dependent manner. HA nanocomposite hydrogels with ND-OH at pH 8 showed an increase of 1.40-fold (0.02%: 236.18 kPa) and 1.37-fold (0.04%: 616.72 kPa) the compressive stress at the composition of 0.02 wt% and 0.04 wt, respectively, compared to those of ND-COOH (0.02%: 168.31 kPa, 0.04%: 449.59 kPa) at the same pH. Moreover, the compressive stress of HA/ND-OH (0.04 wt%) at pH 8 was mechanically enhanced 1.29-fold, compared to that of HA/ND-OH (0.04 wt%) at pH 7. These results indicate that the tunable buffering environment and interaction with the long chains of HA at the molecular level have a critical role in the dependency of the mechanical properties on pH. Due to the pH stability of the ND-OH nanophase, filament-based processing and layer-based deposition at microscale attained enforced mechanical properties of hydrogel. Fine surface tuning of the inorganic ND nanophase and controlled 3D printing leads to improved control over the pH-dependent mechanical properties of the nanocomposite hydrogels reported herein.
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12951-020-00647-w
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AT eunahkang phdependentnanodiamondsenhancethemechanicalpropertiesof3dprintedhyaluronicacidnanocompositehydrogels
AT seonghoonjeong phdependentnanodiamondsenhancethemechanicalpropertiesof3dprintedhyaluronicacidnanocompositehydrogels
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