7 research outputs found
Influence of low impact development construction on pollutant process of road-deposited sediments and associated heavy metals
Electrosprayed Multi-Core Alginate Microcapsules as Novel Self-Healing Containers
Alginate microcapsules containing epoxy resin were developed through electrospraying method and embedded into epoxy matrix to produce a capsule-based self-healing composite system. These formaldehyde free alginate/epoxy microcapsules were characterized via light microscope, field emission scanning electron microscope, fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and thermogravimetric analysis. Results showed that epoxy resin was successfully encapsulated within alginate matrix to form porous (multi-core) microcapsules with pore size ranged from 5–100 μm. The microcapsules had an average size of 320 ± 20 μm with decomposition temperature at 220 °C. The loading capacity of these capsules was estimated to be 79%. Under in situ healing test, impact specimens showed healing efficiency as high as 86% and the ability to heal up to 3 times due to the multi-core capsule structure and the high impact energy test that triggered the released of epoxy especially in the second and third healings. TDCB specimens showed one-time healing only with the highest healing efficiency of 76%. The single healing event was attributed by the constant crack propagation rate of TDCB fracture test. For the first time, a cost effective, environmentally benign and sustainable capsule-based self-healing system with multiple healing capabilities and high healing performance was developed
Superior Adsorption Property of a Novel Green Biosorbent Yttrium/Alginate Gel Beads for Dyes from Aqueous Solution
Synthesis of zinc oxide–montmorillonite composite and its effect on the removal of aqueous lead ions
Alginate: Pharmaceutical and Medical Applications
Due to their outstanding properties in terms of mild gelation conditions
and simple functionalization, biocompatibility, low toxicity, biodegradability,
non-antigenicity and chelating ability, as well as relatively low cost, alginates have
been widely used in a variety of biomedical applications including tissue engineering
and drug delivery systems. Smart alginate hydrogels for on-demand drug release in
response to environmental stimuli and 3D bioprinting will play an important role in
the future. These and the introduction of appropriate cell interactive features will be
crucial for many tissue engineering applications. The focus of the present chapter is
to highlight the great potential of the alginates as biomaterial for biomedical applications
and to discuss the role that alginate-based materials are likely to play in
biomedical applications in the future.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
