UPR 5301

Alice GIBIINO’s thesis defense on December 16th, 2024

Alice GIBIINO completed her thesis entitled “Formation and Mechanical Properties of Biocompatible Self-Healing Hydrogels” under the direction of Laurent Orgeas (CNRS Research Director at the 3SR laboratory) and the co-supervision of Mehdi Bouzid (CNRS Research Officer at the 3SR laboratory) and Raphaël Michel (CNRS Research Officer at the Cermav laboratory).

Abstract of her thesis :

“Hydrogels are promising materials for tissue engineering due to their structural similarity with the extracellular matrix. However, designing hydrogel systems that can replicate a broad range of tissue stiffness (from soft to rigid) while possessing inherent self-repair capabilities, as seen in certain tissues, remains a significant challenge remains a key challenge. 

To tackle this challenge, a first biocompatible hydrogels was devised. Based on hyaluronic acid (HA) chains cross-linked with silica nanoparticles (SiNPs) via dynamic covalent bonds in physiological conditions (pH ~7.4). Rheological measurements revealed that the gel stiffness can be increased by adjusting the SiNP concentration, However the gel remains relatively soft (Shear modulus ~1 to 40 Pa). Coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations provided insights into these experimental observations and guided future experiments by revealing the molecular mechanism of reinforcement and that the key parameters influencing gel stiffness are polymer chain flexibility, the polymer-to-particle size ratio, and nanoparticle concentration. As these parameters are not easily modified experimentally, a second hydrogel system was made in which HA chains can form dynamic covalent bonds not only with the SiNPs but also with other HA chains thereby forming a polymeric network reinforced by SiNPs. By tuning the nanoparticle concentration, the hydrogel reached a higher shear modulus (~1 kPa), exhibited strain-stiffening behavior under large oscillatory deformations —similar to that observed in native biopolymer networks— and displayed self-healing properties.

In conclusion, through a dialogue between simulations and experiments, we developed model composite hydrogel systems that can be formed in physiological conditions (pH ~7.4) and exhibit a tunable mechanical response, capable of mimicking the mechanical properties of some biological tissues.”