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Hydrogels Classification According to the Physical or Chemical Interactions and as Stimuli-Sensitive Materials

Gels 2021 351 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Moisés Bustamante-Torres, David Romero-Fierro, Héctor Magaña, Belén Arcentales-Vera, Kenia Palomino, Emilio Bucio Héctor Magaña, Héctor Magaña, Emilio Bucio Emilio Bucio

Summary

This review classifies hydrogels based on their internal cross-linking mechanisms and their responsiveness to external stimuli such as pH, temperature, light, and enzymes. Researchers examined both physically cross-linked hydrogels, which form through reversible interactions, and chemically cross-linked hydrogels with permanent covalent bonds. The study highlights diverse biomedical applications including drug delivery, tissue engineering scaffolds, biosensors, and actuators.

Hydrogels are attractive biomaterials with favorable characteristics due to their water uptake capacity. However, hydrogel properties are determined by the cross-linking degree and nature, the tacticity, and the crystallinity of the polymer. These biomaterials can be sorted out according to the internal structure and by their response to external factors. In this case, the internal interaction can be reversible when the internal chains are led by physicochemical interactions. These physical hydrogels can be synthesized through several techniques such as crystallization, amphiphilic copolymers, charge interactions, hydrogen bonds, stereo-complexing, and protein interactions. In contrast, the internal interaction can be irreversible through covalent cross-linking. Synthesized hydrogels by chemical interactions present a high cross-linking density and are employed using graft copolymerization, reactive functional groups, and enzymatic methods. Moreover, specific smart hydrogels have also been denoted by their external response, pH, temperature, electric, light, and enzyme. This review deeply details the type of hydrogel, either the internal structure or the external response. Furthermore, we detail some of the main applications of these hydrogels in the biomedicine field, such as drug delivery systems, scaffolds for tissue engineering, actuators, biosensors, and many other applications.

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