4.7 Article

Cryogels: Morphological, structural and adsorption characterisation

Journal

ADVANCES IN COLLOID AND INTERFACE SCIENCE
Volume 187, Issue -, Pages 1-46

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.cis.2012.11.001

Keywords

Cryogel; Structural characteristics; Microscopic image treatment; Cryoporometry; Thermoporometry; Adsorption; Diffusion; Interfacial phenomena

Funding

  1. FP7, project MONACO-EXTRA [PIAP-GA-2008-218242]
  2. FP7, project Bio-Smart [PERG08-GA-2010-276954]
  3. FP7, project Marie Curie International Research Staff Exchange Scheme (COMPOSITUM) [230790]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Experimental results on polymer, protein, and composite cryogels and data treatment methods used for morphological, textural, structural, adsorption and diffusion characterisation of the materials are analysed and compared. Treatment of microscopic images with specific software gives quantitative structural information on both native cryogels and freeze-dried materials that is useful to analyse the drying effects on their structure. A combination of cryoporomety, relaxometry, thermoporometry, small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), equilibrium and kinetic adsorption of low and high-molecular weight compounds, diffusion breakthrough of macromolecules within macroporous cryogel membranes, studying interactions of cells with cryogels provides a consistent and comprehensive picture of textural, structural and adsorption properties of a variety of cryogels. This analysis allows us to establish certain regularities in the cryogel properties related to narrow (diameter 0.4<2 nm), middle (2<50 nm) and broad (50<100 nm) nanopores, micropores (100 nm<100 mu m) and macropores (d>100 mu m) with boundary sizes within modified life science pore classification. Particular attention is paid to water bound in cryogels in native superhydrated or freeze-dried states. At least, five states of water - free unbound, weakly bound (changes in the Gibbs free energy -Delta G<0.5-0.8 kJ/mol) and strongly bound (-Delta G>0.8 kJ/mol), and weakly associated (chemical shift of the proton resonance delta(H) = 1-2 ppm) and strongly associated (delta(H) = 3-6 ppm) waters can be distinguished in hydrated cryogels using H-1 NMR, DSC, TSDC, TG and other methods. Different software for image treatment or developed to analyse the data obtained with the adsorption, diffusion, SAXS, cryoporometry and thermoporometry methods and based on regularisation algorithms is analysed and used for the quantitative morphological, structural and adsorption characterisation of individual and composite cryogels, including polymers filled with solid nano- or microparticles. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available