4.8 Review

Integrating Antioxidant Functionality into Polymer Materials: Fundamentals, Strategies, and Applications

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 35, Pages 41372-41395

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c08061

Keywords

polyphenols; antioxidant; self-assembly; food packaging; polymer films; antimicrobial

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DMR-1808483, DMR1905535]
  2. Texas A&M University Graduate Diversity Excellence Fellowship
  3. Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station (TEES)

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This paper provides a critical overview and comparative analysis of multiple ways of integrating antioxidants within diverse polymer materials, focusing on the versatile chemistry of polyphenolic antioxidants. Including the discussion on controlling localization versus migration of antioxidants in polymer materials through surface grafting and assembly via noncovalent interactions. The understanding and rational use of interactions of polyphenol moieties with surrounding molecules can enable precise control of concentration and retention versus delivery rate of antioxidants in polymer materials for various applications.
While antioxidants are widely known as natural components of healthy food and drinks or as additives to commercial polymer materials to prevent their degradation, recent years have seen increasing interest in enhancing the antioxidant functionality of newly developed polymer materials and coatings. This paper provides a critical overview and comparative analysis of multiple ways of integrating antioxidants within diverse polymer materials, including bulk films, electrospun fibers, and self-assembled coatings. Polyphenolic antioxidant moieties with varied molecular architecture are in the focus of this Review, because of their abundance, nontoxic nature, and potent antioxidant activity. Polymer materials with integrated polyphenolic functionality offer opportunities and challenges that span from the fundamentals to their applications. In addition to the traditional blending of antioxidants with polymer materials, developments in surface grafting and assembly via noncovalent interaction for controlling localization versus migration of antioxidant molecules are discussed. The versatile chemistry of polyphenolic antioxidants offers numerous possibilities for programmed inclusion of these molecules in polymer materials using not only van der Waals interactions or covalent tethering to polymers, but also via their hydrogen-bonding assembly with neutral molecules. An understanding and rational use of interactions of polyphenol moieties with surrounding molecules can enable precise control of concentration and retention versus delivery rate of antioxidants in polymer materials that are critical in food packaging, biomedical, and environmental applications.

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