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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Unveiling the Compression Mechanical Properties of AMPS-APTAC-DMAAm Terpolymeric Hydrogels.

Year:
2025
Authors:
Mussalimova M et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering

Abstract

Polyampholyte hydrogels are promising for load-bearing biomedical applications, but the link between composition and compression behavior remains unclear. In this study, we investigate how initial monomer concentration and a neutral comonomer influence swelling and mechanical properties in AMPS-APTAC networks. Terpolymeric AMPS-APTAC-DMAAm hydrogels were prepared with monomer concentrations from 1 to 2 M, MBAAm levels from 1 to 5 mol%, and DMAAm fractions from 0 to 0.16. Swelling was measured in water. Unconfined compression tests at 3 mm·min<sup>-1</sup> provided stress-strain curves, Young's modulus (E), fracture stress (σ<sub>f</sub>), fracture strain (ε<sub>f</sub>), and toughness (W) up to 99% strain. Increasing the monomer concentration produced denser networks, lower swelling, and higher stiffness. For C2M1, E reached 35.4 kPa, σ<sub>f</sub> reached 0.8 MPa, ε<sub>f</sub> was 82%, and W was 65.6 kJ·m<sup>-3</sup>. Adding DMAAm strengthened the gels through reversible associative interactions. At z = 0.06, σ<sub>f</sub> increased to 4.28 MPa and W to 196.0 kJ·m<sup>-3</sup>. At z = 0.16, E increased to 103.0 kPa, while σ<sub>f</sub> was 2.34 MPa and W was 191.6 kJ·m<sup>-3</sup>. Swelling decreased when monomer or crosslinker content increased. These results show that monomer concentration and DMAAm-mediated associations act as separate design variables that can be tuned to optimize stiffness, strength, and toughness in AMPS-APTAC polyampholyte hydrogels.

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Original publication: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/41441099