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Journal ArticleDOI

Topology evolution and gelation mechanism of agarose gel

TLDR
The gel pore size determined using turbidity measurements has been verified by electrophoretic mobility measurements, and the relationship between the induction time and the driving force which is determined by the final setting temperature follows the 3D nucleation model.
Abstract
Kinetics as well as the evolution of the agarose gel topology is discussed, and the agarose gelation mechanism is identified. Aqueous high melting (HM) agarose solution (0.5% w/v) is used as the model system. It is found that the gelation process can be clearly divided into three stages: induction stage, gelation stage, and pseudoequilibrium stage. The induction stage of the gelation mechanism is identified using an advanced rheological expansion system (ARES, Rheometric Scientific). When a quench rate as large as 30 deg C/min is applied, gelation seems to occur through a nucleation and growth mechanism with a well-defined induction time (time required for the formation of the critical nuclei which enable further growth). The relationship between the induction time and the driving force which is determined by the final setting temperature follows the 3D nucleation model. A schematic representation of the three stages of the gelation mechanism is given based on turbidity and rheological measurements. Aggregation of agarose chains is promoted in the polymer-rich phase and this effect is evident from the increasing mass/length ratio of the fiber bundles upon gelation. Continuously increasing pore size during gelation may be attributed to the coagulation of the local polymer-rich phase in order to achieve the global minimum of the free energy of the gelling system. The gel pore size determined using turbidity measurements has been verified by electrophoretic mobility measurements.

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Citations
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A Robust, One‐Pot Synthesis of Highly Mechanical and Recoverable Double Network Hydrogels Using Thermoreversible Sol‐Gel Polysaccharide

TL;DR: A new type of physically linked double-network hydrogel is synthesized by a simple, time-saving, facile, easily controlled, one-pot method, which makes them very promising hydrogels for load-bearing soft tissues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent trends in bioinks for 3D printing.

TL;DR: More tunable bioinks, which are biocompatible for live cells, printable and mechanically stable after printing are emerging with the help of functional polymeric biomaterials, their modifications and blending of cells and hydrogels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanical characterisation of hydrogel materials

TL;DR: In this article, the basic chemistry, microstructure and processing routes for common natural and synthetic hydrogel materials are explored, and underlying structure-properties relationships for hydrogels are considered, including emerging test modalities such as nanoindentation and atomic force microscopy (AFM) indentation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Agarose-based biomaterials for tissue engineering.

TL;DR: The scope of this review is to summarize the extensive researches addressing agarose-based biomaterials in order to provide an in-depth understanding of its tissue engineering-related applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Single-Cell Multiplex Gene Detection and Sequencing with Microfluidically Generated Agarose Emulsions

TL;DR: Since initial mutagenesis occurs inherently at the single-cell level, the detection and characterization of carcinogenesis will be dramatically facilitated by analytical techniques with single cell resolution.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Phase Separation by Spinodal Decomposition in Isotropic Systems

TL;DR: The theory of phase separation from a single phase fluid by a spinodal mechanism is given in this paper, where the predicted structure may be described in terms of a superpositioning of sinusoidal composition modulations of a fixed wavelength, but random in amplitude, orientation, and phase.
Journal ArticleDOI

The agarose double helix and its function in agarose gel structure

TL;DR: A double helix model is proposed that accounts for the sign and magnitude of the optical rotation shift that accompanies the sol-gel transitions and is sterically accessible to each of the various substituted forms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tertiary and quaternary structure in aqueous polysaccharide systems which model cell wall cohesion: reversible changes in conformation and association of agarose, carrageenan and galactomannans.

TL;DR: It is shown that ordered binding can occur between the agarose or carrageenan helix and parts of the galactomannan backbone that contain contiguous unsubstituted mannose residues, suggesting that the binding might mimic biological cohesion between skeletal and gel phases of natural cell walls.
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