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Lina Zhang

Researcher at Wuhan University

Publications -  794
Citations -  43476

Lina Zhang is an academic researcher from Wuhan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cellulose & Aqueous solution. The author has an hindex of 92, co-authored 708 publications receiving 35039 citations. Previous affiliations of Lina Zhang include Guangxi University & The Chinese University of Hong Kong.

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Construction of chitin/PVA composite hydrogels with jellyfish gel-like structure and their biocompatibility.

TL;DR: The results revealed that the repeated freezing/thawing cycles induced the bicrosslinked networks consisted of chitin and PVA crystals in the composite gels, showing potential applications in the field of tissue engineering.
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Self-assembled micelles based on hydrophobically modified quaternized cellulose for drug delivery.

TL;DR: The study indicated that the prednisone acetate could be incorporated effectively in the self-assembled HMQC micelles and be controlled released and showed that theHMQC exhibited low cytotoxicity.
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Antioxidant and antimicrobial activity of Maillard reaction products from xylan with chitosan/chitooligomer/glucosamine hydrochloride/taurine model systems.

TL;DR: The structure, UV absorbance, browning intensity, fluorescence changes, antioxidant activity and antimicrobial assessment of Maillard reaction products (MRPs) derived from xylan with chitosan, chitooligomer, glucosamine hydrochloride and taurine model systems revealed that the properties of MRPs were closely related to molecular weight of model systems.
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Noncompressible Hemostasis and Bone Regeneration Induced by an Absorbable Bioadhesive Self-Healing Hydrogel

TL;DR: This research introduces a catechol‐conjugated chitosan (CHI‐C) multi‐functional hydrogel with adhesion, self‐healing, cytocompatibility, hemocomp compatibility, and blood cell coagulation capacity that is potentially valuable for clinical applications towards tissueAdhesion, hemostasis, and bone regeneration.
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Improved flexibility and water resistance of soy protein thermoplastics containing waterborne polyurethane

TL;DR: In this article, water-borne polyurethane (WPU) was used to modify soy protein isolate (SPI) with improved flexibility and water resistance, and the blend films were successfully prepared by casting the aqueous dispersions of SPI and WPU.