A solution blown superporous nonwoven hydrogel based on hydroxypropyl cellulose
Journal article, 2020

A superporous hydrogel - in which the interconnecting fibres themselves are hydrogels - based on hydroxypropyl cellulose (HPC) has been produced using the nonwoven solution blown technique. The nonwoven fibres were subsequently thermally crosslinked with citric acid as identified by esterbond formation using FT-IR spectroscopy. The gel fraction was approximately 70%. The superporous HPC hydrogel exhibited a very fast water absorption, reaching an equilibrium absorption (80% water content) within 30 seconds. The equilibrium absorption was strongly codependent on both the fibre thickness and the pore size whereas the absorption rate was correlated with the pore size as established using standard linearized regression analysis.

hydroxypropyl cellulose

nonwoven

hydrogel

absorption

solution blown

Author

Ting Yang Nilsson

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Markus Andersson Trojer

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Soft Matter

1744-683X (ISSN) 1744-6848 (eISSN)

Subject Categories

Chemical Engineering

Chemical Sciences

DOI

10.1039/d0sm00724b

More information

Latest update

12/4/2024