4.6 Article

Tough Photocrosslinked Silk Fibroin/Graphene Oxide Nanocomposite Hydrogels

Journal

LANGMUIR
Volume 34, Issue 31, Pages 9238-9251

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.8b01141

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council (ARC) [DP160101267]
  2. ANSTO [P5246]

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The development of protein-based hydrogels for tissue engineering applications is often limited by their mechanical properties. Herein, we present the facile fabrication of tough regenerated silk fibroin (RSF)/graphene oxide (GO) nanocomposite hydrogels by a photochemical cross-linking method. The RSF/GO composite hydrogels demonstrated soft and adhesive properties during initial stages of photocrosslinking (<2 min), which is not observed for the pristine RSF hydrogel, and rendered a tough and nonadhesive hydrogel upon complete cross-linking (10 min). The composite hydrogels exhibited superior tensile mechanical properties, increased beta-sheet content, and decreased chain mobility compared to that of the pristine RSF hydrogels. The composite hydrogels demonstrated Young's modulus as high as similar to 8 MPa, which is significantly higher than native cartilage (similar to 1.5 MPa), and tensile toughness as high as similar to 2.4 MJ/m(3), which is greater than that of electroactive polymer muscles and at par with RSF/GO composite membranes fabricated by layer-by-layer assembly. Small-angle scattering study reveals the hierarchical structure of photocrosslinked RSF hydrogels to comprise randomly distributed water-poor (hydrophobic) and water-rich (hydrophilic) regions at the nanoscale, whereas water pores and channels exhibiting fractal-like characteristics at the microscale. The size of hydrophobic domain (containing beta-sheets) was observed to increase slightly with GO incorporation and/or alcohol post-treatment, whereas the size of the hydrophilic domain (intersheet distance containing random coils) was observed to increase significantly, which influences/affects water uptake capacity, cross-link density, and mechanical properties of hydrogels. The presented results have implications for both fundamental understanding of the structure-property relationship of RSF-based hydrogels and their technological applications.

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