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Synthesis of polyacid nanogels: pH-responsive sub-100 nm particles for functionalisation and fluorescent hydrogel assembly.

Amir H MilaniJennifer M SaundersNam T NguyenLiam P D RatcliffeDaman J AdlamAnthony J FreemontJudith A HoylandSteven P ArmesBrian R Saunders
Published in: Soft matter (2018)
Nanogels are crosslinked polymer particles with a swollen size between 1 and 100 nm. They are of major interest for advanced surface coatings, drug delivery, diagnostics and biomaterials. Synthesising polyacid nanogels that show triggered swelling using a scalable approach is a key objective of polymer colloid chemistry. Inspired by the ability of polar surfaces to enhance nanoparticle stabilisation, we report the first examples of pH-responsive polyacid nanogels containing high -COOH contents prepared by a simple, scalable, aqueous method. To demonstrate their functionalisation potential, glycidyl methacrylate was reacted with the -COOH chemical handles and the nanogels were converted to macro-crosslinkers. The concentrated (functionalised) nanogel dispersions retained their pH-responsiveness, were shear-thinning and formed physical gels at pH 7.4. The nanogels were covalently interlinked via free-radical coupling at 37 °C to form transparent, ductile, hydrogels. Mixing of the functionalised nanogels with polymer dots enabled covalent assembly of fluorescent hydrogels.
Keyphrases
  • drug delivery
  • hyaluronic acid
  • tissue engineering
  • quantum dots
  • mental health
  • photodynamic therapy
  • cancer therapy
  • wound healing
  • drug release
  • mass spectrometry
  • risk assessment
  • label free
  • simultaneous determination