Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5189242 | Polymer | 2007 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
In this work, the influence of the incorporation of a small amount of carbohydrate-containing monomer N-acryloyllactosylamine (LAM) on the swelling behavior of covalently-crosslinked polyacrylamide hydrogels in water has been reported. The incorporation of LAM into the copolymer was assessed by ATR-FTIR and thermogravimetric experiments. The main result is that the equilibrium water uptake was significantly decreased as soon as the hydrogel contained LAM considering a constant amount of crosslinking agent. The greatest difference of water uptakes between carbohydrate-free hydrogel and carbohydrate-containing hydrogel occurred for the lowest crosslinker amount of 1Â mol%. In that case, the value of the water uptake reached â¼56-fold for the carbohydrate-free hydrogel and decreased down to 41-fold for the 10Â mol% LAM hydrogel. Additional NMR experiments were used to measure the amount of non-crystallizable water which was higher for carbohydrate-free hydrogel than that for lactose-containing hydrogel confirming the water uptake results.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Organic Chemistry
Authors
Philippe Roger, Sylvie Gérard, Virginie Burckbuchler, Laëtitia Renaudie, Patrick Judeinstein,