Hybrid and Single-Component Flexible Aerogels for Biomedical Applications: A Review

Gels. 2023 Dec 21;10(1):4. doi: 10.3390/gels10010004.

Abstract

The inherent disadvantages of traditional non-flexible aerogels, such as high fragility and moisture sensitivity, severely restrict their applications. To address these issues and make the aerogels efficient, especially for advanced medical applications, different techniques have been used to incorporate flexibility in aerogel materials. In recent years, a great boom in flexible aerogels has been observed, which has enabled them to be used in high-tech biomedical applications. The current study comprises a comprehensive review of the preparation techniques of pure polymeric-based hybrid and single-component aerogels and their use in biomedical applications. The biomedical applications of these hybrid aerogels will also be reviewed and discussed, where the flexible polymeric components in the aerogels provide the main contribution. The combination of highly controlled porosity, large internal surfaces, flexibility, and the ability to conform into 3D interconnected structures support versatile properties, which are required for numerous potential medical applications such as tissue engineering; drug delivery reservoir systems; biomedical implants like heart stents, pacemakers, and artificial heart valves; disease diagnosis; and the development of antibacterial materials. The present review also explores the different mechanical, chemical, and physical properties in numerical values, which are most wanted for the fabrication of different materials used in the biomedical fields.

Keywords: biocompatible aerogels; flexible hybrid aerogels; flexible scaffolds; flexible single-component aerogels; mechanical properties; sustained drug delivery; tissue engineering.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This work was supported by Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway through the EEA and Norway Grants and the Technology Agency of the Czech Republic within the framework of the project “inherently flexible aerogels for energy efficient structures (i-FACES)” (Grant number TO01000311, in the amount of EUR 1.08 million).