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  2. Hydrogel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogel

    Gelatin, here in sheets for cooking, is a hydrogel. Peptide hydrogel formation shown by the inverted vial method. A hydrogel is a biphasic material, a mixture of porous and permeable solids and at least 10% of water or other interstitial fluid.

  3. Self-healing hydrogels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-healing_hydrogels

    Self-healing hydrogels are a specialized type of polymer hydrogel.A hydrogel is a macromolecular polymer gel constructed of a network of crosslinked polymer chains. Hydrogels are synthesized from hydrophilic monomers by either chain or step growth, along with a functional crosslinker to promote network formation.

  4. Nanocomposite hydrogels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanocomposite_hydrogels

    The synthesis of nanocomposite hydrogels is a process that requires specific material and method. These polymers need to be made up of equally spaced out, 30 nm in diameter, clay platelets that can swell and exfoliate in the presence of water.

  5. Resilin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resilin

    Like other biomaterials, resilin is a hydrogel, meaning it is swollen with water. The water content of resilin at neutral pH is 50-60%, and the absence of this water will make a big difference on the material's property: while the hydrated resilin behaves like a rubber, the dehydrated resilin has the properties of a glassy polymer. [1]

  6. Nanogel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanogel

    A nanogel is a polymer-based, crosslinked hydrogel particle on the sub-micron scale. [1] [2] [3] These complex networks of polymers present a unique opportunity in the field of drug delivery at the intersection of nanoparticles and hydrogel synthesis.

  7. Biomimetic material - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biomimetic_material

    Biomimetic materials in tissue engineering are materials that have been designed such that they elicit specified cellular responses mediated by interactions with scaffold-tethered peptides from extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins; essentially, the incorporation of cell-binding peptides into biomaterials via chemical or physical modification. [3]

  8. Hydrogel fiber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogel_Fiber

    Hydrogel fiber is a hydrogel made into a fibrous state, where its width is significantly smaller than its length. The hydrogel's specific surface area at fibrous form is larger than that of the bulk hydrogel, and its mechanical properties also changed accordingly.

  9. Bioadhesive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bioadhesive

    A similarly strong, rapidly adhering glue - which contains 171 different proteins and can adhere to wet, moist and impure surfaces - is produced by the very hard [5] [6] limpet species Patella vulgata; this adhesive material is a very interesting subject of research in the development of surgical adhesives and several other applications.