This illustration shows how different temperatures can be used to create different products from biohydrogels depending on their intended application. Image: Heon E. Park.
This illustration shows how different temperatures can be used to create different products from biohydrogels depending on their intended application. Image: Heon E. Park.

Biohydrogels – biomaterials composed of polymer chains dispersed in water – have been studied closely by researchers for their potential use in biomedical applications, such as in tissue repair, as surgical sealants and in 3D biofabrication.

Since these gels contain particles in the solid state that are dispersed as molecules in the liquid state, they often switch between sols (the liquid form of a colloid) and gels (the soft solid form of a colloid), depending on whether they are at room or body temperature. These changes can pose issues depending on their intended use.

In a paper in Physics of Fluids, researchers from New Zealand, Canada and the US report studying the effect of temperature on hydrogels. They found that creating hydrogels at room temperature or below results in more robust materials that function more effectively when used in the body.

"When we want to create a patch for a lung puncture, we want something that can biodegrade in the body but is, at the same time, very sticky, so it adheres to the lung and is tough, so it can work as the lung expands and shrinks," explained Heon Park from the University of Canterbury in New Zealand and a co-author of the paper.

The findings from this study could prove very useful for the 3D printing of biomaterials. At the moment when printing tissues, such as a piece of a lung, or artificial material, such as a dialysis membrane, the bioink (hydrogel plus cells) is stored in a syringe barrel, and it flows out of the syringe through a nozzle by squeezing a piston.

In the study, the authors demonstrated that the bioink will flow irregularly like a gel through the nozzle if the nozzle or the barrel is at room temperature, and this will result in a printed part that is out of shape.

"Our research also shows the temperature of the bioink in the printing syringe should be at body temperature, so that it flows easily when it emerges, and that the printing bed should be room temperature or below, so that the printed part toughens," said Park.

The researchers also discovered methods for minimizing drying of hydrogels, a problem uncovered in many current studies. "Big picture, we have shown that the best way to engineer biomaterials that are rigid and sticky is by changing the temperature rather than by reformulating the hydrogels," said Park.

This story is adapted from material from the American Institute of Physics, with editorial changes made by Materials Today. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent those of Elsevier. Link to original source.