Production of Porous Agarose-Based Structures: Freeze-Drying vs. Supercritical CO2 Drying

Gels. 2021 Nov 5;7(4):198. doi: 10.3390/gels7040198.

Abstract

In this work, the effect of two processes, i.e., freeze-drying and supercritical CO2 (SC-CO2) drying, on the final morphology of agarose-based porous structures, was investigated. The agarose concentration in water was varied from 1 wt% up to 8 wt%. Agarose cryogels were prepared by freeze-drying using two cooling rates: 2.5 °C/min and 0.1 °C/min. A more uniform macroporous structure and a decrease in average pore size were achieved when a fast cooling rate was adopted. When a slower cooling rate was performed instead, cryogels were characterized by a macroporous and heterogenous structure at all of the values of the biopolymer concentration investigated. SC-CO2 drying led to the production of aerogels characterized by a mesoporous structure, with a specific surface area up to 170 m2/g. Moreover, agarose-based aerogels were solvent-free, and no thermal changes were detected in the samples after processing.

Keywords: aerogel; agarose; biopolymer; cryogel; freeze-drying; scaffold; supercritical CO2 drying; tissue engineering.