Issue 5, 2022

Electrofabrication of large volume di- and tripeptide hydrogels via hydroquinone oxidation

Abstract

The fabrication of protected peptide-based hydrogels on electrode surfaces can be achieved by employing the electrochemical oxidation of hydroquinone to benzoquinone, liberating protons at the electrode–solution interface. The localised reduction in pH below the dipeptide gelator molecules pKa initiates the neutralisation, self-assembly and formation of self-supporting hydrogels exclusively at the electrode surface. Previous examples have been on a nanometre to millimetre scale, using deposition times ranging from seconds to minutes. However, the maximum size to which these materials can grow and their subsequent mechanical properties have not yet been investigated. Here, we report the fabrication of the largest reported di- and tri-peptide based hydrogels using this electrochemical method, employing deposition times of two to five hours. To overcome the oxidation of hydroquinone in air, the fabrication process was performed under an inert nitrogen atmosphere. We show that this approach can be used to form multilayer gels, with the mechanical properties of each layer determined by gelator composition. We also describe examples where gel-to-crystal transitions and syneresis occur within the material.

Graphical abstract: Electrofabrication of large volume di- and tripeptide hydrogels via hydroquinone oxidation

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
16 Nov 2021
Accepted
03 Jan 2022
First published
03 Jan 2022
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2022,18, 1064-1070

Electrofabrication of large volume di- and tripeptide hydrogels via hydroquinone oxidation

C. Patterson, B. Dietrich, C. Wilson, A. R. Mount and D. J. Adams, Soft Matter, 2022, 18, 1064 DOI: 10.1039/D1SM01626A

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