4.3 Article

Effects of Salts on Rheological Behaviour of Salvia Hydrogels

Journal

MACROMOLECULAR RESEARCH
Volume 17, Issue 5, Pages 332-338

Publisher

POLYMER SOC KOREA
DOI: 10.1007/BF03218871

Keywords

rheology; rheometer; hydrogel; salvia spp; viscosity; viscoelasticity; electrostatic repulsion

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [LIPI-10512]
  2. Ministry of Education. Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Japan

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Rheological behavior of natural hydrogel produced from seeds of three Salvia spp. (S. miltiorrhiza (SM), S. sclarea (SS), S. viridis (SV)) was investigated by using a Rheometer equipped with a cone and plate geometry measuring system under never-dried condition. Different chemical contents of such hydrogels give significant effects on their theological properties. Because of incomplete penetration of water inside the hydrogels after drying before-dried hydrogels were used for theological analysis. To know molecular interactions which predominated in the gel formation, some constituents were externally added to the 1.0% (w/w) hydrogel. Addition of urea to disrupt hydrogen bonds reduced 3.4-67% viscosity of the untreated hydrogels and changed viscoelastic properties from gel to liquid-like behavior. Neutral salts added to the hydrogel solution at 0.1 M also lowered the viscosity in a manner related with increase in size of cations and temperature. Changing from gel state to liquid-like state was also easily confirmed by oscillation measurement (storage, G', and loss, G '', modulii) typically observed in the cases of potassium sulfate and potassium thiocyanate. Influence of pH variation on the viscosity explained that weak alkaline condition (pH 8-9) creates a higher resistance to flow due to increasingly electrostatic repulsions between negative charges (COO(-)). Importance of calcium bridges was also demonstrated by recovery of viscosity of the hydrogels by addition of calcium after acidification. The summarized results indicate that electrostatic repulsion is a major contributor for production of hydrogel structure.

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