Thin materials made from elastomeric polymers such as polydimethylsiloxane
(PDMS) and polyurethane (PU) can be both, compliant and resilient. Their
mechanical robustness and flexibility will make them great candidates for
applications in the human body where space is limited and repeated
deformations occur. Nonetheless, current medical applications of elastomeric
foil-like products are mainly restricted to inflatable balloon parts of stents or
intubation tubes. Here, a key limiting factor is the autohesive behavior of
those foils, that is, their propensity to stick to themselves. This property
impedes handling and processing and can also interfere with the designated
tasks of such foils. To mitigate this undesired behavior, different
bio-macromolecular coatings are applied here and assess their influence on
the autohesive behavior, flexibility, and transparency of the materials. A
non-covalent, dopamine-assisted coating approach is compared to a covalent
coating strategy employing carbodiimide chemistry and investigated both,
anionic and cationic macromolecules as top layers. The results show that
especially the carbodiimide-mediated mucin coating can efficiently suppress
the autohesive behavior of the foils while maintaining the flexibility and
transparency of the material. Thus, such coatings can not only broaden the
medical application range of foil-based elastomeric devices but may also
prove beneficial for applications in soft robotics.
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Thin materials made from elastomeric polymers such as polydimethylsiloxane
(PDMS) and polyurethane (PU) can be both, compliant and resilient. Their
mechanical robustness and flexibility will make them great candidates for
applications in the human body where space is limited and repeated
deformations occur. Nonetheless, current medical applications of elastomeric
foil-like products are mainly restricted to inflatable balloon parts of stents or
intubation tubes. Here, a key limiting factor...
»