4.1 Article

Sulfonated poly(arylene ether sulfone) copolymers-acid and salt form: Potential biofunctional polymers

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOACTIVE AND COMPATIBLE POLYMERS
Volume 19, Issue 4, Pages 315-329

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0883911504045276

Keywords

sulfonated poly(arylene ether sulfone) copolymers; acid and salt forms; biofunctional polymers; water uptake; contact angle; hydrophobic-hydrophilic sequences

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The synthesis, characterization and preliminary evaluation of the potential for biofunctionality of strong, ductile sulfonated poly(arylene ether sulfone) copolymers of controlled hydrophilicity are described herein. A series of film forming random (statistical) copolymers were made from 4,4'-biphenol and a stoichiometric mixture of 3,3'-disulfonated and non-sulfonated 4,4'-dichlorodiphenyl sulfone; the degree of disulfonation varied from 10-60%. The copolymers were characterized by intrinsic viscosity, DSC, TGA and molecular weight (GPC). Preliminary evaluation of the potential of these copolymers in the acid or basic salt form for biocompatibility and biomedical applications was conducted via water uptake and contact angle measurements. The copolymers were cast into films from 10 wt. percentage solutions in DMAc. Films were converted from the salt form to the acid form through treatment with concentrated H2SO4, and from acid form to sodium salt form by treatment with base. The surface of the films were characterized by XPS that confirmed full conversion to the intended form. The water uptake measurements showed that the acid form absorbed a maximum of similar to 800 wt. percentage, and the salt forms absorbed a maximum of similar to70 to 100 wt. percentage. The contact angle between a water droplet and the surface of the copolymer films in the potassium salt form was measured using the Sessile Drop method, and it decreased as a function of the degree of sulfonation, in the range of 80-40degrees. The possibility of applications in pH-sensitive drug delivery systems is suggested.

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