High-strength cellulose-polyacrylamide hydrogels: mechanical behavior and structure depending on the type of cellulose
Alexander Buyanov, Iosif Gofman, Natalya Saprykina

TL;DR
This study compares the mechanical behavior and microstructure of plant and bacterial cellulose-based hydrogels, revealing significant differences in stiffness and structural features under cyclic compression, with implications for their durability.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of how cellulose type influences the mechanical and structural properties of high-strength hydrogels under cyclic compression.
Findings
Bacterial cellulose hydrogels show decreased stiffness after multiple compressions.
Both hydrogel types withstand up to 80% compression, but bacterial ones soften significantly.
Structural features at micro- and nanoscale explain mechanical behavior differences.
Abstract
Two types of high-strength composite hydrogels possessing the structure of interpenetrating polymer networks were synthesized via free-radical polymerization of acrylamide carried out straight within the matrix of plant or bacterial cellulose swollen in the reactive solution. The mechanical behavior of synthesized hydrogels subjected to the action of compressive deformations with different amplitude values was studied. The analysis of the stress-strain curves of compression tests of the hydrogels of both types obtained in different test conditions demonstrates the substantial difference in their mechanical behavior. Both the plant cellulose-based and bacterial cellulose-based hydrogels withstand successfully the compression with the amplitude up to 80 %, but the bacterial cellulose-based compositions demonstrate in the multiple compression tests the substantial decrease of the…
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