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Degradation mechanisms of bioresorbable polyesters. Part 2. Effects of initial molecular weight and residual monomer

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posted on 2016-05-05, 10:46 authored by Andrew Gleadall, Jingzhe Pan, Marc-Anton Kruft, Minna Kellomäki
This paper presents an understanding of how initial molecular weight and initial monomer fraction affect the degradation of bioresorbable polymers in terms of the underlying hydrolysis mechanisms. A mathematical model was used to analyse the effects of initial molecular weight for various hydrolysis mechanisms including noncatalytic random scission, autocatalytic random scission, noncatalytic end scission or autocatalytic end scission. Different behaviours were identified to relate initial molecular weight to the molecular weight half-life and to the time until the onset of mass loss. The behaviours were validated by fitting the model to experimental data for molecular weight reduction and mass loss of samples with different initial molecular weights. Several publications that consider initial molecular weight were reviewed. The effect of residual monomer on degradation was also analysed, and shown to accelerate the reduction of molecular weight and mass loss. An inverse square root law relationship was found between molecular weight half-life and initial monomer fraction for autocatalytic hydrolysis. The relationship was tested by fitting the model to experimental data with various residual monomer contents.

History

Citation

Acta Biomater, 2014, 10 (5), pp. 2233-2240

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Engineering

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Acta Biomater

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

1742-7061

eissn

1878-7568

Acceptance date

2014-01-15

Copyright date

2014

Available date

2016-05-05

Publisher version

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S174270611400035X

Language

en

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