Abstract

Alginate and gelatin are bio-polymers widely used in drug delivery. A range of salts can be used to achieve the required flexibility in biomaterial design. Hofmeister series gives an idea about the behaviour of salts with proteins. However, its application for the design of biomaterials and their specific effect on high-viscosity polymers and polymer mixtures has not quite been explored. Firstly, this work proposes a strategic interaction-based approach for designing a dual-drug ocular biomaterial. Secondly, the impact of different salt anions on gelatin and alginate mixture for the developed protocols is studied by a proposed method of determining shear-dependent general intrinsic viscosity. Thirdly, shear-dependent intrinsic viscosity is used to determine the interaction amongst the polymers in their mixture, which is then correlated to the release profiles and hydrodynamic radii of polymer mixtures. It is observed that Hofmeister anions behave reversely for high-viscosity negatively charged polymers and depends on the charge densities of the anions. For the polyelectrolyte/polyampholyte complex/mixture, the interactions depend on the addition sequence. It is inferred that the kosmotropes are preferred for protocols where salt is added between gelatin and alginate and chaotropes for protocols where salt is added to the gelatin and alginate complex/mixture in terms of release profiles.

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