Open Access Article
Anton A. A.
Smith‡
a,
Caitlin L.
Maikawa
b,
Hector
Lopez Hernandez
a and
Eric A.
Appel
*ab
aDepartment of Materials Science & Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA. E-mail: eappel@stanford.edu
bDepartment of Bioengineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA
First published on 26th March 2021
Thermoresponsive hydrogel materials show promise as biomaterials as their properties can be widely tuned to fit engineering requirements for an array of important applications. Here we show that the properties of thermogelling tri-block copolymers consisting of a central poly(ethylene glycol) block and pendant N-substituted polyacrylamides can be tuned by altering the random terpolymer compositions. The heterogeneity of the pendant terpolymer blocks is reflected in the concentration dependence of their critical solution behavior. The lower critical solution temperature (LCST) of the pendant blocks can be finely tuned, enabling controlled modulation of thermogel properties. Altering terpolymer composition to control LCST behaviour, therefore, provides a facile approach to design thermogel properties.
000 g mol−1 (Jordi Labs) in a mobile phase of N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) with 0.1 M LiBr at 35 °C and a flow rate of 1.0 mL min−1. The GPC was a Dionex Ultimate 3000 pump, degasser, and autosampler (Thermo Fisher Scientific), equipped with an ERC RefractoMax520 RI refractometer. Fluorescense determination of LCST was performed with dansyl hydroxypropyl suphonamide as the probe at 40 μg mL−1, using a BioTek Synergy H1 microplate reader, exciting at 350 nm and recording a full excitation spectrum.
:
dioxane (1
:
1 v/v), containing PEG-DOPAT (0.45 g, 0.0186 mmol), 120 eq. monomers (2.25 mmol), and 0.48 eq. VA-044 thermal initiator (0.3 mg, 0.009 mmol). The reaction mixtures were heated to 100 °C for 3 minutes. Following polymerization, all volatiles were removed in vacuo by a GeneVac evaporator to recover the polymers. 1H-NMR characterization shown in Fig. S2.† Characteristics shown for all polymers in Table S1.†
Polymerizations with DOPAT (Scheme 1B) were conducted in a total reaction volume of 1 mL of water
:
dioxane (1
:
1 v/v) containing DOPAT (10 mg, 0.029 mmol), 100 eq. of monomers (0.29 mmol), and 0.2 eq. VA-044 thermal initiator (1. mg, 5.7 μmol). Following polymerization, volatiles were removed in vacuo, and the polymers washed with a 1
:
1 mixture of diethyl ether and acetone. 1H-NMR characterization shown in Fig. S3.† Characteristics shown for all polymers in Table S1.† Dansyl hydroxypropyl suphonamide was synthesized as described in literature.17
| Polymer # | ||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | |
References to polymers in text is given by the polymer number followed by the composition in mol % (NIPAM : TBAM : HEAM). |
||||||||||||||
| I NiPAM % | 100 | 95 | 90 | 95 | 90 | 85 | 85 | 80 | 80 | 80 | 75 | 75 | 75 | 75 |
| II TBAM % | 5 | 10 | 5 | 10 | 5 | 15 | 10 | 5 | 20 | 15 | 10 | 5 | ||
| III HEAM % | 5 | 5 | 5 | 10 | 5 | 10 | 15 | 5 | 10 | 15 | 20 | |||
We hypothesized that in the context of thermogelling block copolymers, the entrapped water effectively functions as a plasticizer within the phase-segregated micellar domains that act as physical crosslinks in the thermogelling networks. For thermogels, the chain dynamics of the PNIPAM polymers within these phase segregated domains is expected to correlate to the strength and dynamics of the networks at a given temperature. Following on this rationale, we hypothesized that a lowering of the water content within these micellar domains should produce stronger crosslinks, and that such a decrease in entrapped water can be achieved by introducing more hydrophobic monomers into the terpolymer to alter the critical solution behavior of these materials. For measuring LCST, an amphiphilic dansyl derived fluorescent probe was chosen in favour of the traditional cloud point measurement. When in a hydrophobic environment, the fluorescence emission of dansyl derivatives increases markedly,20 making it an efficient probe for LCST transitions at very low concentrations of the polymer. This allowed for a rapid high-throughput characterization of LCST behavior, as well as a qualitative assessment of overall hydrophobicity of the polymers, due to the overall increased fluorescent emission caused by more hydrophobic polymers (Fig. 2, Fig. S4 and Table S2†). Polymer 1 (100
:
0
:
0), which is a PNIPAM homopolymer, exhibited an onset of fluorescense at the same temperature at all signal producing concentrations, whereas polymer 2 (95
:
5
:
0), which is a P(NIPAM-co-TBAM) copolymer, showed a concentration dependent onset temperature for probe fluorescence. This distinct behaviour likely reflects the heterogeneity of the copolymer, where some chains exhibit different critical solution behavior and commensurate LCSTs than others, depending on the exact TBAM content in individual chains. With more TBAM, the concentration dependence of the LCST is even further increased, again suggesting an impact on measured LCSTs from heterogeneous polymer composition. Polymer 4 (95
:
0
:
5), which is a P(NIPAM-co-HEAM) copolymer, a homogeneous onset of signal is observed, albeit at a higher temperature than for the PNIPAM homopolymer, consistent with literature reports.21
We expect the onset from polymer 4 (95
:
0
:
5) arises from the subset of polymers containing little to no HEAM. The greatest concentration dependence is observed for copolymers containing 10–20% TBAM and 5% HEAM, where the sporadic incorporation of HEAM increases the heterogeneity of the copolymers. In all samples, it is likely that the dodecyl Z-group has contributed to the LCST. Altogether, the concentration dependence of the LCSTs observed for these copolymers is heavily influenced by the heterogeneity in monomer composition encorporated into the chains for short polymers. The LCST for all polymers for all concentrations are listed in Table S2.†
We then employed the program ‘Compositional Drift’ to simulate the incorporation distribution of HEAM and TBAM comonomers into PNIPAM polymers at feed ratios of 5%, 10%, 15%, and 20% mol% for copolymers with a degree of polymerization 50 and dispersities of Đ = 1.02 and Đ = 1.32 (Fig. 3A).22 Even with Đ = 1.02, the distribution of comonomers across all mol% feed ratios is quite broad, and this breadth is exascerbated further when Đ = 1.32. This inherent heterogeneity of comonomer incorporation, even for low dispersity polymers, can be expected to translate into broad temperature dependence of the mechanical properties for thermogels using relatively short terpolymers as a thermally-responsive phase-transitioning block. This distribution narrows as DP increases, and simulated DP 1000 show a narrow compositional variation (Fig. 3B).
A bifunctional PEG RAFT agent (PEG-DOPAT) was synthesized and RAFT polymerization was employed to generate ABA triblock copolymers with various (ter)polymer compositions for the phase-transitioning A blocks (Scheme 1B). We explored the thermogelling behaviour using a combination of dynamic frequency and temperature sweep rheological measurements. The frequency sweeps (Fig. S5 and S6†) provided valuable information about the viscoelasticity of the fluids or gels below and above the LCST for the phase-transitioning blocks. The temperature ramps (Fig. S7†) provided information about the temperature responsiveness of the formulations, including the LCST and gelation temperature. We hypothesized that the phase separation behaviour above the LCST would alter the amount of viscous dissipation (G′′) observed within these triblock copolymer hydrogels and that the appearance of interchain crosslinks above the LCST of each formulation would significantly increase the elastic response (G′). All NIPAM-based (co)polymer formulations showed liquid-like behaviour at 25 °C (Fig. S6†), demonstrating loss moduli greater than storage moduli at all frequencies measured. Indeed, for every formulation the loss modulus (G′′) scaled linearly with frequency throughout the entire frequency regime evaluated, and the storage modulus (G′) scaled with the frequency squared, characteristic of viscous fluid-like behaviour.23 Temperature ramps were performed at a frequency of 1 s−1 from 25 °C to 78 °C (unless otherwise specified) at 2 °C min−1. For a typical (co)polymer solution, increases in the temperature are analogous to decreasing measurement frequencies,24 resulting in a decrease in the storage and loss modulus and an increase in tan
δ. For these LCST block copolymers, behaviour similar to that of a viscous solution was observed up to the LCST temperature, beyond which the (co)polymers start to phase separate. Temperature ramps (Fig. 4Ai and Bi) reveal peaks in tan
δ, indicating temperatures at which the viscoelasticity stops scaling as a simple viscous fluid.
The terpolymer compositions tested showed peaks in tan
δ ranging from 25 °C to 36 °C, indicative of the LCST temperature, where the polymers begin to phase separate and stop contributing to viscous dissipation within the solution The LCST measured for the triblock copolymer compositions by fluorescense was in good agreement with the temperature that corresponds to the peak value in tan
δ (Fig. S7;† Fluorescence LCST vs. Peak TanDelta LCST). The peak in tan
δ preceded a crossover of the storage and loss modulus, which is indicative of gelation and occurred at a temperature (Tgel) approximately double the LCST (Fig. 4C and Fig. S8, S9†). At this temperature, sufficient network formation results in an elastically dominant mechanical response. Gelation temperatures were measured in the range of 45 °C and 80 °C and gelation was observed for every formulation tested except those with HEAM compositions exceeding 15 mol%. The storage modulus of the resulting gels increases with temperature, as water is excluded from the terpolymer rich mesoglobular phase, to the point of forming an elastic network.
The viscoelasticity of each formulation was measured at elevated temperatures to probe their frequency-dependent mechanical response after gelation (Fig. 4 and Fig. S5†). This analysis was particularly important for formulations which demonstrated higher LCSTs and no crossover during the temperature ramp at a frequency of 1 s−1. Fig. 4Aii and Bii show characteristic responses for a lower LCST polymer and a higher LCST polymer, respectively. The frequency sweeps at 78 °C showed complex viscoelastic behaviours with a rubbery plateau and a crossover frequency. We found that as the temperature is increased past the Tgel the crossover frequency of the hydrogels continues to decrease. The crossover frequency for each formulation shown as a function of (78 °C – Tgel) highlights the decrease in crossover frequency as the distance from Tgel increases (Fig. 4D). The crossover frequency is the inverse of the relaxation time, so as the crossover frequency decreases the relaxation time of the network increases. Interestingly, these observations suggest that the NIPAM-based copolymers continue to phase separate as the temperature of the system is increased, retarding the relaxation processes in the hydrogels. Several of the compositions tested did not demonstrate crossover frequencies at 78 °C. In contrast, polymers 2 (95
:
5
:
0), 3 (90
:
10
:
0), 6 (85
:
10
:
5), 8 (80
:
15
:
5), and 11 (75
:
20
:
5) showed solid-like behavior throughout the entire frequency range measured (0.5–100 rad s−1). All compositions demonstrated similar plateau values for both the storage and loss moduli (with the exception of polymers 8 and 9), demonstrating that these (co)polymers generate a similar network structure after gelation. Therefore, modification of the copolymer LCST through alteration of terpolymer compositions affords tunability over the temperature transitions and viscoelastic responses of triblock thermogelling materials.
It is curious that the Tgel for these ABA triblock copolymers does not coincide with the LCST of the NIPAM-based copolymer A blocks. We hypothesize that this transition occurs at higher temperatures due to local rearrangements of the polymers near the LCST, whereby higher temperatures are required to expel sufficient water from the micellar crosslinks to produce sufficiently strong crosslinks for gellation. Similar above-LCST behaviour has been observed for NIPAM-based hydrogels,25 and the observations made here corroborates that transitions above the LCST can be exploited in the design of the mechanical responses of thermoresponsive materials.
Footnotes |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/d0py01696a |
| ‡ Current address: Technical University of Denmark, Department of Health Technology, 2800 Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark. |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021 |