Abstract

AbstractThe surface chemistry of a range of random poly l‐lactide‐co‐glycolide (PLGA) materials has been investigated using XPS, static secondary ion mass spectrometry (SSIMS) and gentle secondary ion mass spectrometry (G‐SIMS). The estimated mole fraction of lactide units provided by SSIMS was in good agreement with bulk composition and appeared not to have been affected by contamination. Conversely, XPS assessment of lactide compositions was unreliable due to hydrocarbon contamination contributions. In this study, we propose a novel model to demonstrate that by using SSIMS it is possible to infer the degree of trans‐esterification for PLGA co‐polymers synthesised from a mixture of lactide and glycolide homo‐dimers. This was determined by introducing two independent parameters, the ratio of trans‐esterified bonds to the total number of ester bonds, PT, and the lactide composition. The model has indicated that, for this set of polymers, PT was approximately 0.25. Furthermore, we have demonstrated that G‐SIMS successfully identified the structurally important key fragments leading to direct identification. Analysis by G‐SIMS showed that the glycolic acid units from all PLGA compositions are emitted in a lower energy‐fragmentation process than lactic acid units. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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