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Carbon nanotubes induced gelation of unmodified hyaluronic acid

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 02:12 authored by Camilo Zamora-Ledezma, Lionel Buisson, Simon Moulton, Gordon WallaceGordon Wallace, Cecile Zakri, Christophe Blanc, Eric Anglaret, Philippe Poulin
This work reports an experimental study of the kinetics and mechanisms of gelation of carbon nanotubes (CNTs)-hyaluronic acid (HA) mixtures. These materials are of great interest as functional biogels for future medical applications and tissue engineering. We show that CNTs can induce the gelation of noncovalently modified HA in water. This gelation is associated with a dynamical arrest of a liquid crystal phase separation, as shown by small-angle light scattering and polarized optical microscopy. This phenomenon is reminiscent of arrested phase separations in other colloidal systems in the presence of attractive interactions. The gelation time is found to strongly vary with the concentrations of both HA and CNTs. Near-infrared photoluminescence reveals that the CNTs remain individualized both in fluid and in gel states. It is concluded that the attractive forces interplay are likely weak depletion interactions and not strong van der Waals interactions which could promote CNT rebundling, as observed in other biopolymer-CNT mixtures. The present results clarify the remarkable efficiency of CNT at inducing the gelation of HA, by considering that CNTs easily phase separate as liquid crystals because of their giant aspect ratio.

Funding

Novel Drug Delivery Systems

Australian Research Council

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New dimensions in organic bionics

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Zamora-Ledezma, C., Buisson, L., Moulton, S. E., Wallace, G. G., Zakri, C., Blanc, C., Anglaret, E. and Poulin, P. (2013). Carbon nanotubes induced gelation of unmodified hyaluronic acid. Langmuir: the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids, 29 (32), 10247-10253.

Journal title

Langmuir

Volume

29

Issue

32

Pagination

10247-10253

Language

English

RIS ID

81560

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