Abstract

Due to its low cost, biocompatibility and slow bioresorption, poly-ε-caprolactone (PCL) continues to be a suitable material for select biomedical engineering applications. We used a combined atomic force microscopy (AFM)/optical microscopy technique to determine key mechanical properties of individual electrospun PCL nanofibers with diameters between 440–1040nm. Compared to protein nanofibers, PCL nanofibers showed much lower adhesion, as they slipped on the substrate when mechanically manipulated. We, therefore, first developed a novel technique to anchor individual PCL nanofibers to micrometer-sized ridges on a substrate, and then mechanically tested anchored nanofibers. When held at constant strain, tensile stress relaxed with fast and slow relaxation times of 1.0±0.3s and 8.8±3.1s, respectively. The total tensile modulus was 62±26MPa, the elastic (non-relaxing) component of the tensile modulus was 53±36MPa. Individual PCL fibers could be stretched elastically (without permanent deformation) to strains of 19–23%. PCL nanofibers are rather extensible; they could be stretched to a strain of at least 98%, and a tensile strength of at least 12MPa, before they slipped off the AFM tip. PCL nanofibers that had aged for over a month at ambient conditions became stiffer and less elastic. Our technique provides accurate nanofiber mechanical data, which are needed to guide construction of scaffolds for cells and other biomedical devices.

Highlights

  • Synthetic biomaterials have steadily come to the forefront of application-driven design in tissue and biomedical engineering over the past 15 years [1,2,3]

  • We determined a set of key mechanical properties for electrospun PCL fibers, including viscoelasticity, yield point stress and strain, relaxation times, total and elastic tensile modulus, and energy loss with increasing strain and we show that certain mechanical properties are dependent on sample age

  • Anchoring fibers creates well-defined boundary conditions, which allows for the determination of well-defined fiber mechanical properties

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Summary

Introduction

Synthetic biomaterials have steadily come to the forefront of application-driven design in tissue and biomedical engineering over the past 15 years [1,2,3]. While our recent studies demonstrate the superior mechanical performance of electrospun fibrinogen nanofibers, problems persist with fast degradation rates and mechanical instability when these fibers are uncrosslinked [18,19,24,25,26]. Native proteins, such as collagen and fibrinogen, are more expensive and more difficult to source than synthetic polymers. Such obstacles motivate the need to engineer scaffolds that have good bioresorbability, suitable mechanical properties, reduced biodegradability, easy sourcing and low cost

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