Abstract
Injectable poly(ethylene glycol, PEG)-based hydrogels were reversibly crosslinked through thia-conjugate addition bonds and demonstrated to shear thicken at low shear rates. Crosslinking bond exchange kinetics and dilute polymer concentrations were leveraged to tune hydrogel plateau moduli (from 60 - 650 Pa) and relaxation times (2 - 8 seconds). Under continuous flow shear rheometry, these properties affected the onset of shear thickening and the degree of shear thickening achieved before a flow instability occurred. The changes in viscosity were reversible whether the shear rate increased or decreased, suggesting that chain stretching drives this behavior. Given the relevance of dynamic PEG hydrogels under shear to biomedical applications, their injectability was investigated, and injection forces were found to increase with higher polymer concentrations and slower bond exchange kinetics. Altogether, these results characterize the nonlinear rheology of dilute, dynamic covalent tetra-PEG hydrogels and offer insight to the mechanism driving their shear thickening behavior.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information
Description
Supporting Information includes 1H NMR spectra, oscillatory strain sweeps, fits to the Maxwell model, measurements of the shear stress as a function of time, shear stress sweeps, and estimates of crosslinking concentration.
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