4.8 Review

Mechanical reinforcement of granular hydrogels

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 13, Issue 11, Pages 3082-3093

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1sc06231j

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Granular hydrogels, composed of dense-packed microgels, have potential applications in tissue engineering scaffolds. However, their weak mechanical properties limit their use as load-bearing materials. This review discusses strategies for assembling microgels into granular hydrogels and emphasizes the influence of inter-particle connections on the stiffness and toughness of the resulting materials. Strong and tough granular hydrogels have the potential to be used in soft actuators, tissue replacements, and adaptive sensors.
Granular hydrogels are composed of hydrogel-based microparticles, so-called microgels, that are densely packed to form an ink that can be 3D printed, injected or cast into macroscopic structures. They are frequently used as tissue engineering scaffolds because microgels can be made biocompatible and the porosity of the granular hydrogels enables a fast exchange of reagents, waste products, and if properly designed even the infiltration of cells. Most of these granular hydrogels can be shaped into appropriate macroscopic structures, yet, these structures are mechanically rather weak. The poor mechanical properties prevent the use of these structures as load-bearing materials and hence, limit their field of applications. The mechanical properties of granular hydrogels depend on the composition of microgels and the interparticle interactions. In this review, we discuss different strategies to assemble microparticles into granular hydrogels and highlight the influence of inter-particle connections on the stiffness and toughness of the resulting materials. Mechanically strong and tough granular hydrogels have the potential to open up new fields of their use and thereby to contribute to fast advances in these fields. In particular, we envisage them to be well-suited as soft actuators and robots, tissue replacements, and adaptive sensors.

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