Recent advances in the area of hydrogel synthesis have been directed to enhance the mechanical properties and biocompatibility, which are critical in their use as functional biomaterials. In this work, a green and facile method is introduced to produce a hydrogel based on xylan, a plant-based heteropolysaccharide, that is shown to successfully form hydrogen-bonded, semi-interpenetrating polymer networks with polyvinyl alcohol. Upon crosslinking with sodium trimetaphosphate, the obtained hydrogels achieved an exceptional compressive strength (up to 84.2 MPa at a fracture strain of 90 %), which surpasses any polysaccharide-based hydrogels reported so far. The hydrogels were further shown to have high degradation temperature (350-370 °C), to be mechanically resilient with a form and creep recovery of 95 % (78 % stress after 1000 cycles under 30 % strain) and 98 % in height, respectively. All materials used in the preparation of the hydrogels were non-toxic and biocompatible, which makes the synthesized hydrogels suitable potential candidates for soft-tissue engineering and biomedical applications.
Keywords: Compressive resilience; Compressive strength; Creep recovery; Hydrogel; Semi-interpenetrating polymer network; Xylan.
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