A hydrogel is a polymeric three-dimensional network structure. The applications of this material type are diversified over a broad range of fields. Their soft nature and similarity to natural tissue allows for their use in tissue engineering, medical devices, agriculture, and industrial health products. However, as the demand for such materials increases, the need to understand the material mechanics is paramount across all fields. As a result, many attempts to numerically model the swelling and drying of chemically responsive hydrogels have been published. Material characterization of the mechanical properties of a gel bead under osmotic loading is difficult. As a result, much of the literature has implemented variants of swelling theories...
Hydrogels generally consist of a solid network and of a fluid permeating the network. Interactions b...
Stimuli-responsive hydrogels undergo large shape change in response to a wide variety of stimuli, su...
Hydrogels consist in a water-swollen and self-supporting polymeric network. They can undergo extreme...
A hydrogel is a polymeric three-dimensional network structure. The applications of this material typ...
A hydrogel is a polymeric three-dimensional network structure. The applications of this material typ...
textA hydrogel consists of a cross-linked polymer network and solvent molecules, capable of large, r...
A hydrogel is a crosslinked network of polymer chains swollen by water. When immersed in an aqueous ...
The swelling and compression of hydrogels in polymer solutions can be understood by considering hydr...
Hydrogels are materials widely used in countless applications, particularly in the biomedical, pharm...
We present a theory for the chemically-induced volume transitions of hydrogels. Consistent with expe...
A hydrogel is a cross-linked polymer network with water as solvent. Industrially widely used superab...
Hydrogels are a staple of biomaterials development. Optimizing their use in e.g. drug delivery or ti...
Hydrogels are sponge-like materials that can absorb or expel significant amounts of water. Swelling ...
Polymeric materials consist of mutually entangled or chemically crosslinked long njitmolecular chain...
Hydrogels generally consist of a solid network and of a fluid permeating the network. Interactions b...
Stimuli-responsive hydrogels undergo large shape change in response to a wide variety of stimuli, su...
Hydrogels consist in a water-swollen and self-supporting polymeric network. They can undergo extreme...
A hydrogel is a polymeric three-dimensional network structure. The applications of this material typ...
A hydrogel is a polymeric three-dimensional network structure. The applications of this material typ...
textA hydrogel consists of a cross-linked polymer network and solvent molecules, capable of large, r...
A hydrogel is a crosslinked network of polymer chains swollen by water. When immersed in an aqueous ...
The swelling and compression of hydrogels in polymer solutions can be understood by considering hydr...
Hydrogels are materials widely used in countless applications, particularly in the biomedical, pharm...
We present a theory for the chemically-induced volume transitions of hydrogels. Consistent with expe...
A hydrogel is a cross-linked polymer network with water as solvent. Industrially widely used superab...
Hydrogels are a staple of biomaterials development. Optimizing their use in e.g. drug delivery or ti...
Hydrogels are sponge-like materials that can absorb or expel significant amounts of water. Swelling ...
Polymeric materials consist of mutually entangled or chemically crosslinked long njitmolecular chain...
Hydrogels generally consist of a solid network and of a fluid permeating the network. Interactions b...
Stimuli-responsive hydrogels undergo large shape change in response to a wide variety of stimuli, su...
Hydrogels consist in a water-swollen and self-supporting polymeric network. They can undergo extreme...