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Investigation of the nanomechanical properties of soft biomaterials using atomic force microscopy (AFM)

This study presents a systematic investigation of two types of soft biomaterials: phospholipid-based microbubbles (MBs) and agarose hydrogels, using atomic force microscopy (AFM) force-distance curves. Microbubbles are used widely in several applications, especially in medical applications, where they are used as ultrasound contrast agents (UCAs) and as vehicles for transporting the drugs and genes to their targets, which is commonly known as drug/gene delivery. Although plenty of attention has been paid to these materials by medical researchers there is a shortage of engineering research on the properties of these materials. The present study tries to address this gap by studying these materials from the engineering perspective; therefore, the aim of this study is to investigate the mechanical properties of MBs and hydrogels. In this research, phospholipid-based microbubbles (MBs), commercially called SonoVue® microbubbles and used as UCAs, were investigated to measure their mechanical properties using an AFM mode of operation called force-distance curves (or force spectroscopy mode); this mode allows for direct mechanical tests to acquire the force-deformation (F-Δ) behaviour of the MBs. The compression tool was a flat (tipless) cantilever moved at constant speed, whereas the variable was MB size. The MBs behaviour was assessed by calculating several mechanical properties, which were the stiffness, Young's modulus (three different models were applied), hysteresis, plasticity, adhesion forces, nonlinearity and instability. The stiffness and the Young's modulus values were measured to be in the same range as found in similar studies. A phenomenon was observed that the local stiffness of the MB increases after each unstable step provided that the MB stays within the linear elastic region. The Young's modulus was calculated applying three models, two for estimating the elastic modulus of the shell and the third for modulus of elasticity of the whole MB. The stretching component of the membrane theory was found to provide the best prediction of the Young's modulus value. To investigate the effect of the tip geometry on the mechanical properties of the MBs, the MBs were studied with different cantilever/tips, including a conical-tipped cantilever. The study concluded that there is no impact of the contact geometry on the mechanical properties of the MBs if the applied forces and the spring constant of the cantilever are the same. The same phenomenon, increasing the local stiffness of the MB after each unstable step, was found however with a higher rate. Hydrogels were also studied in this research using AFM and adopting a nanoindentation technique. The indenter was a conical tip moving toward the sample surface with constant speed and applying similar forces on all samples, where the variable was the gel concentration. In addition to the previous mechanical properties, other properties were investigated, such as hardness, universal hardness and pressure. An effect of the gel concentration on the mechanical properties of the gels was observed. There is a difference in the results compared to those reported in the literature review, where some of the results are in the same range as those found here, while others were either higher or lower, due to the influence of factors such as the indenter geometry, the applied force and the load rate; moreover, it was found that the viscoelastic behaviour of the gels played a significant role.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:756490
Date January 2018
CreatorsAlbaijan, Ibrahim Ahmed S.
ContributorsKoutsos, Vasileios ; Sboros, Vassilis ; Mill, Frank
PublisherUniversity of Edinburgh
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://hdl.handle.net/1842/31189

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