Effect of cross-link density and hydrophilicity of PU on blood compatibility of hydrophobic PS hydrophilic PU IPNs

Authors
Roh, HWSong, MJHan, DKLee, DSAhn, JHKim, SC
Issue Date
1999-01
Publisher
VSP BV
Citation
JOURNAL OF BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE-POLYMER EDITION, v.10, no.1, pp.123 - 143
Abstract
To investigate the effect of the hydrophilic and hydrophobic microdomain structure on blood compatibility, a series of interpenetrating polymer networks (IPNs) composed of hydrophilic polyurethane (PU) and hydrophobic polystyrene (PS) was prepared. One series was prepared with varying cross-link densities of each network, the other with varying hydrophilicity of the PU component. All PU/PS IPNs exhibited microphase-separated structures that had dispersed PS domains in the continuous PU matrix. The domain size decreased with decreasing the hydrophilicity of the PU component and increasing the cross-link density of each network. As the cross-link density and hydrophobicity of the PU component was increased, an inward shift of Tps was observed, which was due to the decrease in phase separation between the hydrophobic PS component and hydrophilic PU component. In the in vitro platelet adhesion test, as the microdomain size of PU/PS IPN surface decreased, the number of adhered platelets on the PU/PS IPN surface was reduced and deformation of the adhered platelets decreased. It could be concluded that blood compatibility of PU/PS IPN was mainly affected by the degree of mixing between PU and PS component, which was reflected by the domain size of PS rich phase.
Keywords
INTERPENETRATING POLYMER NETWORKS; POLYURETHANE POLYSTYRENE IPNS; HIGH-PRESSURE; ANTITHROMBOGENICITY; MORPHOLOGY; INTERPENETRATING POLYMER NETWORKS; POLYURETHANE POLYSTYRENE IPNS; HIGH-PRESSURE; ANTITHROMBOGENICITY; MORPHOLOGY; polyurethane-polystyrene interpenetrating polymer networks (PU/PS IPNs); blood compatibility; platelet adhesion; phase separation; degree of mixing; microdomain structure
ISSN
0920-5063
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/142628
DOI
10.1163/156856299X00324
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KIST Article > Others
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