Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1402955 European Polymer Journal 2008 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Data on sorption and transport of water in polyvinyl alcohol films, modified by thermal treatment above Tg, or by chemical crosslinking with glutaraldehyde at different crosslinking degrees, are presented. Equilibrium swelling is constrained by both treatments, except for low degrees of crosslinking where the said reduction is counterbalanced by the partial loss of crystallinity. Analysis of the resulting water uptake kinetics indicates that viscous relaxation effects are, at least partly, responsible for the observed non-Fickian kinetic behavior. Thermodynamic diffusion coefficients of water, DW, and relaxation frequencies of the swelling polymer, βW, are determined by application of a theoretical model accounting for relaxation-dependent sorption kinetics in glassy polymers. The results indicate that the effect of both heat-treatment and chemical crosslinking is more intense on the macromolecular relaxation process than on the diffusion coefficient of water. Comparison of the release kinetics of a model drug from as-prepared, non-crosslinked and from crosslinked matrices indicate that the retardation of macromolecular relaxations process induced by crosslinking results in a more uniform release rate.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Organic Chemistry
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