Litcius/Paper detail

Conductive, Injectable, and Spinnable Aniline Tetramer-Modified Polysaccharide Hydrogels for Self-Powered Electrically Responsive Drug Release

Yaqi Zhang, Jingyi Qi, Fan Han, Pu Chen, Borui Li, Lanyong Zhao, Zikui Bai, Ruquan Zhang, Yongzhen Tao

2022ACS Applied Polymer Materials16 citationsDOI

Abstract

Self-powered electrically responsive and wearable/implantable drug delivery based on conductive, injectable, and biocompatible hydrogels has emerged as a paradigm for on-demand treatment of diseases. Herein, an electroactive aniline tetramer (AT)-grafted mushroom hyperbranched polysaccharide (TM3a) was codissolved with xanthan gum (XG) and cross-linked with sodium trimetaphosphate (STMP) to fabricate conductive and injectable XG-TMAT-STMP hydrogels. The XG3-TMAT30-STMP hydrogel swollen in a simulated gastric fluid possessed a high conductivity of 23.27 ± 0.20 mS/cm. When applying a potential of 3 V, the apparent diffusion coefficient increased regardless of whether placing DXMS-loaded hydrogels between two electrodes or setting them at the anode or the cathode, indicating electrically responsive release. The extruded XG3-TMAT-STMP hydrogel fibers exhibited good conductivity and stretchablility with low a gauge factor of 1.13 (10% < ε < 50%), suggesting potential applications as bioelectrodes and wearable/implantable drug carriers. Additionally, a triboelectric nanogenerator was fabricated by applying the XG3-TMAT30-STMP hydrogel as a triboelectric material to harvest an output potential of 0.9–1.3 V, indicating feasible application as a self-powered source.

Topics & Concepts

Self-healing hydrogelsMaterials scienceChemical engineeringNanocelluloseNanotechnologyAnodeCathodeDrug deliveryElectrodePolymer chemistryChemistryCelluloseEngineeringPhysical chemistryAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting MaterialsAdvanced Materials and MechanicsElectrospun Nanofibers in Biomedical Applications
Conductive, Injectable, and Spinnable Aniline Tetramer-Modified Polysaccharide Hydrogels for Self-Powered Electrically Responsive Drug Release | Litcius