4.7 Article

Decoupling of Mechanical and Transport Properties in Organogels via Solvent Variation

Journal

GELS
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/gels7020061

Keywords

organogel; block copolymer; structure-property relationships; transport; mechanics

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (US) Division of Materials Research [1904047]
  2. National Science Foundation (US) CMMI [1828082]
  3. Bucknell University
  4. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  5. Division Of Materials Research [1904047] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  6. Directorate For Engineering
  7. Div Of Civil, Mechanical, & Manufact Inn [1828082] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Organogels are being explored as materials for transdermal drug delivery, with findings suggesting that the varying viscosity of mineral oils affects solute transport through gels, but not their mechanical behavior. This relationship between mineral oil viscosity and solute diffusion is supported by a theoretical hydrodynamic model.
Organogels have recently been considered as materials for transdermal drug delivery media, wherein their transport and mechanical properties are among the most important considerations. Transport through organogels has only recently been investigated and findings highlight an inextricable link between gels' transport and mechanical properties based upon the formulated polymer concentration. Here, organogels composed of styrenic triblock copolymer and different aliphatic mineral oils, each with a unique dynamic viscosity, are characterized in terms of their quasi-static uniaxial mechanical behavior and the internal diffusion of two unique solute penetrants. Mechanical testing results indicate that variation of mineral oil viscosity does not affect gel mechanical behavior. This likely stems from negligible changes in the interactions between mineral oils and the block copolymer, which leads to consistent crosslinked network structure and chain entanglement (at a fixed polymer concentration). Conversely, results from diffusion experiments highlight that two penetrants-oleic acid (OA) and aggregated aerosol-OT (AOT)-diffuse through gels at a rate inversely proportional to mineral oil viscosity. The inverse dependence is theoretically supported by the hydrodynamic model of solute diffusion through gels. Collectively, our results show that organogel solvent variation can be used as a design parameter to tailor solute transport through gels while maintaining fixed mechanical properties.

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