Damping and vibration properties of alginate-poloxamer hydrogels doped with sepiolite and cactus fibres
Gianni Comandini, Fabrizio Scarpa, Evita Ning, Graham J Day, James P K Armstrong, Abderrezak Bezazi, Adam W Perriman

TL;DR
This study develops and characterizes novel alginate-poloxamer hydrogels doped with sepiolite and cactus fibres, demonstrating enhanced damping and mechanical properties suitable for vibration damping applications.
Contribution
It introduces a new composite hydrogel formulation with systematically optimized damping properties using Design of Experiments methodology.
Findings
Storage modulus up to twice that of pure hydrogels.
Sepiolite stabilizes response to temperature changes.
Cactus fibres improve stiffness and damping performance.
Abstract
We investigated a novel class of composite hydrogels composed of alginate, poloxamer, sepiolite, and cactus fibres for vibration damping applications. Using a Design of Experiments methodology, we systematically correlated manufacturing parameters with mechanical and damping properties, performance using Dynamic Mechanical Analysis and vibration testing. The hydrogels were characterised under controlled temperature, frequency, and humidity conditions, with results demonstrating that the storage modulus can reach up to twice that of pure hydrogel formulations, using diluted dispersions with total additive concentration below 2 wt%. Sepiolite additions below 0.3 wt% were found to stabilise the material response to temperature variations, while cactus fibres enhanced both stiffness and damping performance in a concentration-dependent manner. Optimal performance was achieved with a…
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