Abstract
Nanocomposite hydrogels (NC gels) were synthesized through in situ polymerization of N-isopropylacrylamide (NIPAm) in the hectorite clay suspension made from cell culture medium Dulbecco’s modified Eagle medium (DMEM). Cell cultured on these NC gels (D-NC gels) surface proliferated faster compared with that on the NC gels synthesized in water due to the nutrients in the D-NC gels. Cells attached and proliferated faster on the D-NC gels with higher modulus. In addition, cell sheets with good viability spontaneously detached from the gel surface by lowering temperature. Their tensile elongation at break was higher than 7 and the true strength σtrue was up to 800kPa. The stress–strain curves of the D-NC gels were described quantitatively with the Mooney–Rivlin equation. A stretched exponential stress equation was adopted to express the stress relaxation of the D-NC gels with an average relaxation time τ (∼102s) estimated from data fitting, showing a broad distribution (polydispersity k∼0.4). The τ value, which was used in simulation for the tensile creep compliance of the D-NC gels, became shorter with increasing clay concentration due to the decrease in the network chain length. The relaxation process was similar to the natural articular cartilage. This work provides a facile way to produce hydrogels with improved cell compatibility and satisfactory mechanical properties for biomedical applications.
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