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Fabricating Superhydrophobic Polymeric Materials for Biomedical Applications
Authors:Jonah Kaplan  Mark Grinstaff
Institution:1.Department of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University;2.Departments of Biomedical Engineering, Chemistry, and Medicine, Boston University
Abstract:Superhydrophobic materials, with surfaces possessing permanent or metastable non-wetted states, are of interest for a number of biomedical and industrial applications. Here we describe how electrospinning or electrospraying a polymer mixture containing a biodegradable, biocompatible aliphatic polyester (e.g., polycaprolactone and poly(lactide-co-glycolide)), as the major component, doped with a hydrophobic copolymer composed of the polyester and a stearate-modified poly(glycerol carbonate) affords a superhydrophobic biomaterial. The fabrication techniques of electrospinning or electrospraying provide the enhanced surface roughness and porosity on and within the fibers or the particles, respectively. The use of a low surface energy copolymer dopant that blends with the polyester and can be stably electrospun or electrosprayed affords these superhydrophobic materials. Important parameters such as fiber size, copolymer dopant composition and/or concentration, and their effects on wettability are discussed. This combination of polymer chemistry and process engineering affords a versatile approach to develop application-specific materials using scalable techniques, which are likely generalizable to a wider class of polymers for a variety of applications.
Keywords:Bioengineering  Issue 102  Electrospinning  electrospraying  polycaprolactone  poly(lactide-co-glycolide)  microfiber  nanofiber  microparticles  superhydrophobic  biomaterials  drug delivery  biodegradable  surface coatings  
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