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Electrospinning of nanofibres with parallel line surface texture for improvement of nerve cell growth

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journal contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by Chen Huang, Yanwei Tang, Xin LiuXin Liu, Alessandra SuttiAlessandra Sutti, Q Ke, X Mo, Xungai Wang, Y Morsi, Tong Lin
Nanofibres having a parallel line surface texture were electrospun from cellulose acetate butyrate solutions using a solvent mixture of acetone and N,N'-dimethylacetamide. The formation mechanism of the unusual surface feature was explored and attributed to the formation of voids on the jet surface at the early stage of electrospinning and subsequent elongation and solidification of the voids into a line surface structure. The fast evaporation of a highly volatile solvent, acetone, from the polymer solution was found to play a key role in the formation of surface voids, while the high viscosity of the residual solution after the solvent evaporation ensured the line surface to be maintained after the solidification. Based on this principle, nanofibres having a similar surface texture were also electrospun successfully from other polymers, such as cellulose acetate, polyvinylidene fluoride, poly(methyl methacrylate), polystyrene and poly(vinylidene fluoride-co-hexafluoropropene), either from the same or from different solvent systems. Polarized Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy was used to measure the polymer molecular orientation within nanofibres. Schwann cells were grown on both aligned and randomly oriented nanofibre mats. The parallel line surface texture assisted in the growth of Schwann cells especially at the early stage of cell culture regardless of the fibre orientation. In contrast, the molecular orientation within nanofibres showed little impact on the cell growth.

History

Journal

Soft matter

Volume

7

Issue

22

Pagination

10812 - 10817

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

Location

Cambridge, U. K.

ISSN

1744-683X

eISSN

1744-6848

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, The Royal Society of Chemistry