4.7 Article

Ionotropic Gelation Fronts in Sodium Carboxymethyl Cellulose for Hydrogel Particle Formation

Journal

GELS
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/gels7020044

Keywords

polyelectrolyte gel; sodium carboxymethyl cellulose; microparticles; hydrogel; small angle neutron scattering; ionic gelation; front propagation; FTIR

Funding

  1. EPSRC [EP/P51052X/1]
  2. Royal Academy of Engineering [RCSRF1920/10/60]
  3. Procter Gamble

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This research investigates the gelation process of sodium carboxymethyl cellulose with Fe3+ cations in water, utilizing FTIR and SANS techniques to reveal the gelation mechanism and structural evolution, providing a foundation for designing HMP particles with specified morphologies.
Hydrogel microparticles (HMPs) find numerous practical applications, ranging from drug delivery to tissue engineering. Designing HMPs from the molecular to macroscopic scales is required to exploit their full potential as functional materials. Here, we explore the gelation of sodium carboxymethyl cellulose (NaCMC), a model anionic polyelectrolyte, with Fe3+ cations in water. Gelation front kinetics are first established using 1D microfluidic experiments, and effective diffusive coefficients are found to increase with Fe3+ concentration and decrease with NaCMC concentrations. We use Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) to elucidate the Fe3+-NaCMC gelation mechanism and small angle neutron scattering (SANS) to spatio-temporally resolve the solution-to-network structure during front propagation. We find that the polyelectrolyte chain cross-section remains largely unperturbed by gelation and identify three hierarchical structural features at larger length scales. Equipped with the understanding of gelation mechanism and kinetics, using microfluidics, we illustrate the fabrication of range of HMP particles with prescribed morphologies.

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