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Enzymatic degradation of graphene/polycaprolactone materials for tissue engineering

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 10:08 authored by Eoin Murray, Brianna Thompson, Sepidar SayyarSepidar Sayyar, Gordon WallaceGordon Wallace
Graphene/polycaprolactone composites have proven to be promising substrates for biodegradable tissue engineering scaffolds for electro-responsive tissue types. The degradation behaviour of these materials will be critical to any future application. To that end, the effect of chemically converted reduced graphene oxide (CCG) on the enzymatic degradation of graphene/polycaprolactone composites in phosphate buffered saline was examined. Two types of graphene/polycaprolactone composites were tested; a simple blend and our previously developed covalently-linked composites. A number of graphene concentrations of each type were tested. Covalently linked graphene/polycaprolactone (cPCl-CCG) showed a consistent degradation profile maintaining the graphene:PCL ratio throughout the degradation process. However, the mixed blended sample (mixPCl-CCG) showed inconsistent graphene loss indicative of non-homogeneous dispersion throughout the polymer matrix. Increasing the graphene concentration up to 1 wt% did not change the rate of degradation but at higher concentrations degradation was slowed. The degradation products were also shown to be non-toxic to the proliferating cells.

Funding

ARC Centre of Excellence - Australian Centre for Electromaterials Science

Australian Research Council

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Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Murray, E., Thompson, B. C., Sayyar, S. & Wallace, G. G. (2015). Enzymatic degradation of graphene/polycaprolactone materials for tissue engineering. Polymer Degradation and Stability, 111 71-77.

Journal title

Polymer Degradation and Stability

Volume

111

Pagination

71-77

Language

English

RIS ID

96016

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