TY - THES A1 - Leiendecker, Mai-Thi T1 - Physikalische Hydrogele auf Polyurethan-Basis T1 - Physical hydrogels based on polyurethanes N2 - Physical hydrogels have gained recent attention as cell substrates, since viscoelasticity or stress relaxation is a powerful parameter in mechanotransduction, which has long been neglected. We designed multi-functional polyurethanes to form physical hydrogels via a unique tunable gelation mechanism. The anionic polyurethanes spontaneously form aggregates in water that are kept in a soluble state through electrostatic repulsion. Fast subsequent gelation can be triggered by charge shielding which allows the aggregation and network building to proceed. This can be induced by adding either acids or salts, resulting in acidic (pH 4-5) or pH-neutral hydrogels, respectively. Whereas conventional polyurethane-based hydrogels are commonly prepared from toxic isocyanate precursors, the physical hydrogelation mechanism described here does not involve chemically reactive species which is ideal for in situ applications in sensitive environments. Both stiffness and stress relaxation can be tuned independently over a broad range and the gels exhibit excellent stress recovery behavior. N2 - Physikalische Hydrogele gewinnen derzeit als Zellsubstrate zunehmend an Interesse, da Viskoelastizität oder Stressrelaxation ein bedeutender Parameter in der Mechanotransduktion ist, der bisher vernachlässigt wurde. In dieser Arbeit wurden multi-funktionelle Polyurethane entworfen, die über einen neuartigen Gelierungsmechanismus physikalische Hydrogele bilden. In Wasser bilden die anionischen Polyurethane spontan Aggregate, welche durch elektrostatische Abstoßung in Lösung gehalten werden. Eine schnelle Gelierung kann von hier aus durch Ladungsabschirmung erreicht werden, wodurch die Aggregation voranschreitet und ein Netzwerk ausgebildet wird. Dies kann durch die Zugabe von verschiedenen Säuren oder Salzen geschehen, sodass sowohl saure (pH 4 - 5) als auch pH-neutrale Hydrogele erhalten werden können. Während konventionelle Hydrogele auf Polyurethan-Basis in der Regel durch toxische isocyanat-haltige Präpolymere hergestellt werden, eignet sich der hier beschriebene physikalische Gelierungsmechanismus für in situ Anwendungen in sensitiven Umgebungen. Sowohl Härte als auch Stressrelaxation der Hydrogele können unabhängig voneinander über einen breiten Bereich eingestellt werden. Darüberhinaus zeichnen sich die Hydrogele durch exzellente Stressregeneration aus. KW - Polyurethane KW - Hydrogele KW - physikalische Hydrogele KW - Kolloidchemie KW - Viskoelastizität KW - Stressrelaxation KW - Stressrelaxierung KW - Bulkgele KW - Mikrogele KW - Mechanotransduktion KW - polyurethanes KW - hydrogels KW - physical hydrogels KW - colloidal chemistry KW - viscoelasticity KW - stress-relaxation KW - stress relaxation KW - bulk gels KW - microgels KW - mechanotransduction Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-103917 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schürings, Marco-Philipp A1 - Nevskyi, Oleksii A1 - Eliasch, Kamill A1 - Michel, Ann-Katrin A1 - Liu, Bing A1 - Pich, Andrij A1 - Böker, Alexander A1 - von Plessen, Gero A1 - Wöll, Dominik T1 - Diffusive Motion of Linear Microgel Assemblies in Solution JF - Polymers N2 - Due to the ability of microgels to rapidly contract and expand in response to external stimuli, assemblies of interconnected microgels are promising for actuation applications, e.g., as contracting fibers for artificial muscles. Among the properties determining the suitability of microgel assemblies for actuation are mechanical parameters such as bending stiffness and mobility. Here, we study the properties of linear, one-dimensional chains of poly(N-vinylcaprolactam) microgels dispersed in water. They were fabricated by utilizing wrinkled surfaces as templates and UV-cross-linking the microgels. We image the shapes of the chains on surfaces and in solution using atomic force microscopy (AFM) and fluorescence microscopy, respectively. In solution, the chains are observed to execute translational and rotational diffusive motions. Evaluation of the motions yields translational and rotational diffusion coefficients and, from the translational diffusion coefficient, the chain mobility. The microgel chains show no perceptible bending, which yields a lower limit on their bending stiffness. KW - microgels KW - linear assemblies KW - in situ fluorescence microscopy KW - shape analysis KW - rotational diffusion KW - translational diffusion KW - bending stiffness KW - actuation Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3390/polym8120413 SN - 2073-4360 VL - 8 PB - MDPI CY - Basel ER -