4.7 Article

Diffusion of dissolved ions from wet silica sol-gel monoliths: Implications for biological encapsulation

Journal

COLLOIDS AND SURFACES B-BIOINTERFACES
Volume 102, Issue -, Pages 611-619

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.colsurfb.2012.08.063

Keywords

Silica sol-gel; Diffusion; Bioencapsulation; Tetraethoxysilane; Organically modified siloxane

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [0829199-CBET]
  2. Air Force Office of Scientific Research [08NL208]

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Divalent nickel (Ni2+),Cu(II)EDTA, methyl orange, and dichromate were used to investigate diffusion from hydrated silica sol-gel monoliths. The objective was to examine diffusion of compounds on a size regime relevant to supporting biological components encapsulated within silica gel prepared in a biologically compatible process space with no post-gelation treatments. With an initial sample set, gels prepared from tetraethoxysilane were explored in a factorial design with Ni2+ as the tracer, varying water content during hydrolysis, acid catalyst present during hydrolysis, and the final concentration of silica. A second sample set explored diffusion of all four tracers in gels prepared with aqueous silica precursors and a variety of organically modified siloxanes. Excluding six outliers which displayed significant syneresis, the mean diffusion constant (D-gel) across the entire process space of sample set 1 was 2.42 x 10(-1) m(2) s(-1); approximately 24% of the diffusion coefficient of Ni2+ in unconfined aqueous solution. In sample set 2, the tracer size and not gel hydrophobicity was the primary determinant of changes in diffusion rates. A strong linear inverse correlation was found between tracer size and the magnitude of D-gel. Based on correlation with the tracers used in this investigation, the characteristic 1-h diffusion distance for carbonate species relevant to supporting active phototrophic organisms was approximately 1.5 mm. These results support the notion that silica sol-gel formulations may be optimized for a given biological entity of interest with manageable impact to the diffusion of small ions and molecules. (c) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights

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