Hyperbranched Polymer With Dynamic Thiol-Aldehyde Crosslinking And Its Application As A Self-Healable Bioadhesive

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY B(2021)

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Abstract
Bioadhesives crosslinked with dynamic bonds exhibit shear-thinning, self-healing, and on-demand detachment properties, but generally show a weak bonding performance due to their poor bulk strength. Obtaining a strong bioadhesive with reversible crosslinking remains a challenge. To address this issue, herein we engineered a dynamic thiol-aldehyde crosslinked solvent-free adhesive based on hyperbranched polymer. The adhesive was obtained by directly mixing a liquid hyperbranched polymer with thiol end groups (HBPTE) and benzaldehyde-terminated polyethylene glycol (PEGCHO) without any additional catalyst or solvent. The solvent-free strategy yielded a dense crosslinking structure with many aldehyde groups, so this HBPTE-PEGCHO adhesive can strongly bond to tissue and various non-biological substrates. In addition, the HBPTE-PEGCHO adhesive has self-healing and thermo-reversible bonding properties due to the dynamic thiol-aldehyde crosslinking matrix. In vivo wound healing experiments show that this HBPTE-PEGCHO adhesive is tissue-benign, suggesting it can be applied in clinical practice. Combining the hyperbranched polymer-based solvent-free strategy and dynamic thiol-aldehyde crosslinking chemistry provides a simple but effective way to engineer a multifunctional bioadhesive with the desired bonding performance.
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Self-Assembled Monolayers
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