The effects of crystallinity (x c ) on the hydrolysis of high molecular weight poly(L-lactide) (PLLA) films in a phosphate-buffered solution at 37Β°C was investigated by gel permeation chromatography, tensile testing, differential scanning calorimetry, scanning electron microscopy, and polarizing opt
Properties and morphology of poly(L-lactide). II. Hydrolysis in alkaline solution
β Scribed by Hideto Tsuji; Yoshito Ikada
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 231 KB
- Volume
- 36
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0887-624X
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β¦ Synopsis
Hydrolysis of poly( L-lactide ) (PLLA) films in 0.01N NaOH at 37ΠC was investigated by gel permeation chromatography, differential scanning calorimetry, scanning electron microscopy, and polarizing optical microscopy. The change in molecular weight distribution and surface morphology of PLLA films during hydrolysis revealed that PLLA film hydrolysis in dilute alkaline solution proceeded mainly via the surface erosion mechanism. An insignificant dependence of the rate of weight loss per unit surface area on the PLLA film thickness also supported this conclusion. Etching of the outside of PLLA spherulites resulted in preferred hydrolysis of PLLA chains in the amorphous region. The disorientation of lamella and inhomogeneous erosion in the spherulites implied that hydrolysis of PLLA chains occurred predominantly in the amorphous region between the crystalline regions in the spherulites. The rate of weight loss per unit surface area decreased linearly with the increase in the initial crystallinity of PLLA film, while the radius of spherulites had practically no significant effect on the hydrolysis of PLLA film. The specific low molecular weight of PLLA chains produced by hydrolysis increased with the rise in annealing temperature of the PLLA film, suggesting that the PLLA chains released were the component of one fold in the crystalline region.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Blend films were prepared from poly( L-lactide ) (PLLA) and poly( 1-caprolactone) (PCL) with different PLLA contents [X PLLA (w/w) Γ PLLA/(PCL / PLLA)] by the solution-casting method and their hydrolysis behaviors were investigated up to 20 months in a phosphate-buffered solution of pH 7.4 at 37ΠC b