Login / Signup

Water-Driven Sol-Gel Transition in Native Cellulose/1-Ethyl-3-methylimidazolium Acetate Solutions.

Roshan Akdar Mohamed YunusMarcus KochPhilippe Dieudonné-GeorgeDomenico TruzzolilloRalph H ColbyDaniele Parisi
Published in: ACS macro letters (2024)
The addition of water to native cellulose/1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium acetate solutions catalyzes the formation of gels, where polymer chain-chain intermolecular associations act as cross-links. However, the relationship between water content ( W c ), polymer concentration ( C p ), and gel strength is still missing. This study provides the fundamentals to design water-induced gels. First, the sol-gel transition occurs exclusively in entangled solutions, while in unentangled ones, intramolecular associations hamper interchain cross-linking, preventing the gel formation. In entangled systems, the addition of water has a dual impact: at low water concentrations, the gel modulus is water-independent and controlled by entanglements. As water increases, more cross-links per chain than entanglements emerge, causing the modulus of the gel to scale as G p ∼ C p 2 W c 3.0±0.2 . Immersing the solutions in water yields hydrogels with noncrystalline, aggregate-rich structures. Such water-ionic liquid exchange is examined via Raman, FTIR, and WAXS. Our findings provide avenues for designing biogels with desired rheological properties.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • hyaluronic acid
  • wound healing
  • mass spectrometry
  • high resolution
  • oxidative stress
  • aqueous solution