Abstract

A novel capability built upon secondary electron (SE) spectroscopy provides an enhanced cross-linking characterization toolset for polymeric biomaterials, with cross-linking density and variation captured at a multiscale level. The potential of SE spectroscopy for material characterization has been investigated since 1947. The absence of suitable instrumentation and signal processing proved insurmountable barriers to applying SE spectroscopy to biomaterials, and consequently, capturing SE spectra containing cross-linking information is a new concept. To date, cross-linking extent is inferred from analytical techniques such as nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), differential scanning calorimetry, and Raman spectroscopy (RS). NMR provides extremely localized information on the atomic scale and molecular scale, while RS information volume is on the microscale. Other methods for the indirect study of cross-linking are bulk mechanical averaging methods, such as tensile and compression modulus testing. However, these established averaging methods for the estimation of polymer cross-linking density are incomplete because they fail to provide information of spatial distributions within the biomaterial morphology across all relevant length scales. The efficacy of the SE spectroscopy capability is demonstrated in this paper by the analysis of poly(glycerol sebacate)-methacrylate (PGS-M) at different degrees of methacrylation delivering new insights into PGS-M morphology.

Highlights

  • The potential of secondary electron (SE) spectroscopy for mate- polymer

  • The results provide evidence that increasing degree of methacrylate (DM) does directly increase the hardness of the material and has a strong influence on its elastic modulus

  • The consistency of SE hyperspectral imaging (SEHI) results when compared to those of the Raman spectrum provides a strong argument that both the techniques possess the ability to detect cross-linking in poly(glycerol sebacate)-methacrylate (PGS-M) through CH bonding changes

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Summary

Introduction

The potential of secondary electron (SE) spectroscopy for mate- polymer. Increasing the density of cross-links decreases the rial characterization has been investigated as far back as 1947.[1] ability of polymer chains to slide over each other and accord-. SEHI will be applied to characterize the increasing cross-linking densities of PGS-M at three different DM levels: 30%, 50%, and 80%.

Results
Conclusion
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