pH-responsive microgels containing hydrophilic crosslinking co-monomers: Shell-exploding microgels through design

Abstract

pH-responsive microgels are crosslinked polymer colloids that swell when the pH approaches the pKa of the particles. They have potential application for injectable gels for tissue repair and drug delivery systems. This study focuses on the pH-triggered gelation behaviour of a series of poly (EA/MAA/X) microgels. EA and MAA are ethylacrylate and methacrylic acid. Here, we investigate the effect of crosslinking monomer type (X) on microgel properties. The crosslinking monomers used were poly (ethyleneglycol) dimethacrylate (PEGD), ethyleneglycol dimethacrylate (EGD) and butanediol diacrylate (BDD). The microgel containing PEGD (m-PEGD) is a new system. The microgel containing BDD (m-BDD) was used as a control system. The concentrated microgel dispersions formed physical gels when the pH was increased to 5.3-6.7, and the polymer volume fractions (φp) were above about 0.05. Evidence from photon correlation spectroscopy (PCS) and dynamic rheology was presented for abrupt pH-triggered increases, and then decreases of the hydrodynamic diameters for m-PEGD and the microgel prepared using EGD (m-EGD). This appears to be tuneable through crosslinker structure. An unexpected gelation behaviour, which may involve a new gel state for microgels, was found for m-PEGD dispersions. Uniquely, those dispersions formed gels at pH values less than the microgel's pKa. This behaviour was linked to an outer-shell electrostatic repulsive interaction. The data point to a phenomenon, whereby the m-PEGD shells appear to explode at pH values above 7.0. The control microgel prepared, using BDD (m-BDD), did not show any evidence of shell fragmentation at any pH. That microgel has potential as a model pH-responsive microgel system in that the properties measured by PCS and rheology agreed well. To probe that system in more detail, the rheological data for m-BDD was analysed using scaling theory. The variation of the storage modulus (G′) with φp gave a scaling exponent of 2.0. © Springer-Verlag 2011

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