DocumentCode :
3544337
Title :
Atmospheric plasma surface modification of electrospun poly(L-lactic acid): Effect on mat properties and cell culturing
Author :
Alessandri, M. ; Calza, L. ; Colombo, Vittorio ; Dolci, L.S. ; Fiorani, A. ; Focarete, M.L. ; Ghedini, Emanuele ; Gherardi, Matteo ; Gualandi, C. ; Laurita, Romolo ; Liguori, Anna ; Quiroga, S.D. ; Sanibondi, Paolo
Author_Institution :
Health Sci. & Technol. - Interdept. Center for Ind. Res. (HST-ICIR), Alma Mater Studiorum - Univ. di Bologna, Ozzano dell´Emilia, Italy
fYear :
2013
fDate :
16-21 June 2013
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
1
Abstract :
Summary form only given.Material science applied to regenerative medicine and tissue engineering study the achievement of biocompatible artificial tissues to improve, self-repair or favour cellular therapies. Various studies prove plasma ability to modify polymeric scaffold surface, with an improvement of hydrophilicity and surface roughness demonstrated by a reduction of contact angle and by an increase of surface energy without altering bulk properties. Furthermore, it was demonstrated that cell cultures on plasma modified scaffolds display better proliferation and viability compared to pristine materials. In this work we focus on the use of atmospheric pressure non-thermal plasma for surface modification of electrospun poly(L-lactic acid) (PLLA) non-woven mats. The electrospinning technology allows to fabricate scaffolds of polymeric materials with highly porous structure, interconnected pores and large specific surface area, that mimic extracellular matrix (ECM). In this work results will be presented concerning the process of exposure of electrospun scaffolds to the plasma region generated by three different plasma sources operated at atmospheric pressure: a floating electrode dielectric barrier discharge (FE-DBD), a linear corona discharge and a DBD roller. A high voltage generator capable of producing pulses with a rise rate in the order of some kV/ns has been used. All the sources are easily scaled-up in the frame of a “large area treatment” approach. Plasma sources characterization has been carried out through a wide set of measurements, changing operating conditions, geometry and plasma gas composition, as the fundamental stage in a multi-step approach for process optimization. In this work, results on the effect of plasma treatment on morphology, thermo-mechanical and surface properties of PLLA electrospun nanofibrous mats will be presented. Results for the introduction of COOH functional group on PLLA electrospun scaffold and for the pro- iferation of rat embryonic stem cells (RESCs) grown on plasma treated and untreated PLLA electrospun scaffolds will be presented and discussed.
Keywords :
biomedical materials; biomimetics; cellular biophysics; corona; electrospinning; hydrophilicity; materials properties; plasma applications; plasma sources; porous materials; surface roughness; surface treatment; tissue engineering; COOH functional group; DBD roller; ECM; FE-DBD; PLLA electrospun nanofibrous mat; RESC growth; atmospheric plasma surface modification; atmospheric pressure nonthermal plasma; biocompatible artificial tissue; biomimetics; bulk properties; cell culture proliferation; cell culturing; cell viability; cellular therapy; contact angle reduction; electrospinning technology; electrospun PLLA nonwoven mat; electrospun poly(L-lactic acid); electrospun scaffold exposure; extracellular matrix; floating electrode dielectric barrier discharge; geometry; high voltage generator; hydrophilicity improvement; interconnected pore; large area treatment approach; linear corona discharge; mat morphology; mat properties; mat surface properties; mat thermomechanical properties; material science; operating condition; plasma effect; plasma gas composition; plasma modified scaffold; plasma region; plasma source characterization; plasma treated PLLA electrospun scaffold; plasma treatment effect; polymeric material scaffold fabrication; polymeric scaffold surface modification; porous structure; process optimization multistep approach; pulse production; rat embryonic stem cell proliferation; regenerative medicine; self-repair improvement; surface area; surface energy; surface roughness improvement; tissue engineering; untreated PLLA electrospun scaffold; Materials; Plasma properties; Rough surfaces; Surface morphology; Surface roughness; Surface treatment;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science (ICOPS), 2013 Abstracts IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
ISSN :
0730-9244
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.2013.6633186
Filename :
6633186
Link To Document :
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