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Glutaraldehyde treatment of bacterial cellulose/fibrin composites: impact on morphology, tensile and viscoelastic properties
Authors:Elvie E Brown  Marie-Pierre G Laborie  Jinwen Zhang
Institution:(1) Composite Materials and Engineering Center, Washington State University, P.O. Box 64180, Pullman, WA 99164-1806, USA;(2) Institute of Forest Utilization and Works Science, Albert-Ludwig University of Freiburg, Werthmannstr. 6, 79085 Freiburg, Germany
Abstract:Bacterial cellulose/fibrin composites were treated with glutaraldehyde in order to crosslink the polymers and allow better match of the mechanical properties with those of native small-diameter blood vessels. Tensile and viscoelastic properties of the glutaraldehyde treated composites were determined from tensile static tests and cyclic creep tests, respectively. Glutaraldehyde-treated (bacterial cellulose) BC/fibrin composites exhibited tensile strength and modulus comparable to a reference small-diameter blood vessel; namely a bovine coronary artery. However, the breaking strain of the glutaraldehyde-treated composites was still well below that of the native blood vessel. Yet a long strain hardening plateau was induced by glutaraldehyde treatment which resembled the stress–strain response of the native blood vessel. Tensile cyclic creep test indicated that the time-dependent viscoelastic behavior of glutaraldehyde-treated BC/fibrin composites was comparable to that of the native blood vessel. Covalent bonding between BC and fibrin occurred via glutaraldehyde, affording mechanical properties comparable to that of the native small blood vessel.
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