4.7 Article

Conformational and rheological properties of bacterial cellulose sulfate

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES
Volume 183, Issue -, Pages 2326-2336

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2021.06.001

Keywords

Bacterial cellulose sulfate; Preparation; Chemical structure; Chain conformation; Rheological properties

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51873175]
  2. Gansu Provincial Fund for Guiding Scientific and Technological Innovation and Development [2019zx5]

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The study prepared a water-soluble bacterial cellulose sulfate using sulfur trioxide pyridine complex and bacterial cellulose, which exhibited shear thinning behavior and temperature-sensitive weak elastic gel characteristics based on rheological properties. The modified bacterial cellulose existed in linear polymer form in aqueous solution and could potentially be used as a renewable material in the field of biological tissue engineering.
In this study, a water-soluble bacterial cellulose sulfate (BCS) was prepared with sulfur trioxide pyridine complex (SO3 center dot Py) in a lithium chloride (LiCl)/dimethylacetamide (DMAc) homogeneous solution system using bacterial cellulose (BC). The structural study showed that the value for the degrees of substitution of BCS was 1.23. After modification, the C-6 hydroxyl group of BC was completely substituted and the C-2 and C-3 hydroxyl groups were partially substituted. In an aqueous solution, the BCS existed as a linear polymer with irregular coil conformation, which was consistent with the findings observed using atomic force microscopy. The steady-state shear flow and dynamic viscoelasticity were systematically determined over a range of BCS concentrations (1 %-4 %, w/v) and temperature (5 degrees C-50 degrees C). Steady-state flow experiments revealed that BCS exhibited shear thinning behavior, which increased with an increase in concentration and a decrease in temperature. These observations were quantitatively demonstrated using the cross model. Moreover, based on the dynamical viscoelastic properties, we confirmed that BCS was a temperature-sensitive and weak elastic gel, which was somewhere between a dilute solution and an elastic gel. Therefore, considering the special synthetic strategy and rheological behavior, BCS might be used as a renewable material in the field of biological tissue engineering, especially in the manufacture of injectable hydrogels, cell scaffolds, and as a drug carrier.

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