Creating Cellulose Gels by Replicating a Bird’s Adhesive Saliva

Creating Cellulose Gels by Replicating a Bird’s Adhesive Saliva

Using a small bird’s nest-making process​ as⁢ a model, researchers from North‍ Carolina State University⁢ have developed a nontoxic process for making cellulose gels. The freeze-thaw process is simple, cost-effective, and can create cellulose gels that are useful in a number of applications, including tunable gels for timed drug delivery. The ⁤process also works‌ with bamboo and⁢ potentially other lignin-containing plant fibers.

The⁢ work appears in Advanced ​Composites and Hybrid Materials. ⁢Noureddine Abidi of​ Texas Tech University is a co-corresponding author of⁢ the work.

Cellulose is a wonderful material for making hydrogels—which are used in applications ranging from⁣ contact‌ lenses to wound care and drug delivery. But creating hydrogels from cellulose is‌ tricky, and often⁣ the processes used to create the hydrogels are themselves ‍toxic.

“Normally, you have‌ to first dissolve the cellulose and then ⁢induce⁤ it to crosslink or ‍form the structure of interest, which often requires the ⁣use of difficult to handle, unstable, or toxic solvents,” says Lucian ⁤Lucia, ⁤professor ⁤of ⁢forest biomaterials and chemistry at NC State and co-corresponding author of ⁢the‌ work.

Enter the swift‍ family of⁣ birds—small birds who⁣ use their saliva to hold twigs ‍in place when ​building their nests.

2023-10-16 14:48:03
Original from⁣ phys.org

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