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Hydrogels modified by amphiphilic structures
Heger, Richard ; Sedlařík, Vladimír (referee) ; Kráčalík, Milan (referee) ; Pekař, Miloslav (advisor)
The submitted dissertation deals with the influence of amphiphilic structures on hydrogel properties. Additions of various amphiphilic substances associated with the formation of highly ordered structures affect the mechanical, transport and structural properties of hydrogels. The main inspiration for this type of work was living tissue, more precisely the extracellular matrix, which is often mimicked by hydrocolloids, and its high orderliness is responsible for its unique properties. The knowledge obtained from this tissue was applied to the hydrogel systems studied in this work. Various cross-linked hydrogel matrices (physically cross-linked agarose and gelatin, ionically cross-linked alginate and chemically cross-linked mixture of polyvinyl alcohol and chitosan) were suitable representatives for this work. These hydrogel systems were modified by the addition of various amphiphilic substances. The human body’s own phospholipid, lecithin, or variously charged more classic surfactants (CTAB, SDS and Triton X-100). Experimentally, this work is divided into three areas, the study of mechanical properties using rheology, the description of transport properties via release and flow experiments using various model drugs (rhodamine 6G, eosin B, amido black 10B, methylene blue and riboflavin), and morphological characterization using SEM. The characterization of hydrogel systems was supported by other techniques used in this work, such as drying and swelling experiments or gas sorption.

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