Abstract
Electrochemical hydrogel fabrication is the process of preparing hydrogels directly on to an electrode surface. There are a variety of methods to fabricate hydrogels, which are specific to the type of gelator and the desired properties of the hydrogel. A range of analytical methods that can track this gelation and characterise the final properties are discussed in this short review.
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1 Introduction
Electrochemical hydrogel fabrication is a common term used to describe the process of preparing hydrogels on to an electrode surface. However, other phrases such as electrodeposition, bio-assembly, bio-printing, e-gels and electrogelation are also used to describe this process. Hydrogels can be prepared by changing the solubility of the gelating component on the electrode surface [1,2,3]. There are a variety of reduction and oxidation (redox) methods used to induce this change in solubility. Commonly, methods are chosen considering a combination of the gelator type, solution composition and the desired properties of the final product. These methods require either the reduction or oxidation of a species in the gelator solution (Table 1).
Although the methods to fabricate hydrogels on an electrode surface may differ, the fundamental principles are similar. In general, these methods create a solubility gradient in which the gelator is soluble in the bulk solution but insoluble at the electrode surface. This change in solubility triggers the assembly of gelator components into hydrogels on the electrode surface, while in the bulk solution the gelator components remain soluble. Figure 1 shows how redox trigger hydroquinone can be oxidised on an electrode surface, producing benzoquinone and protons. The protons set up a pH gradient which is low on the electrode surface and high in the bulk solution [2, 11]. The resulting low pH triggers gel formation which continues to grow as the hydroquinone is continuously oxidised.
Common electrochemical set ups include a working electrode such as a glassy carbon, platinum, or FTO (fluorine doped tin oxide)/ITO (indium doped tin oxide) coated glass, within a three-electrode system. Electrode surfaces can be patterned in order for a hydrogel of a specific shape to be prepared (see Sect. 2.1). Electrode pens have the advantage of being mobile and can be used to sketch regions within a bulk gelator solution. The sketched regions are less soluble than the bulk which triggers the self-assembly of the gelator [30]. Gelation by an electrode pen allows for greater spatial control within a bulk solution than regular triggers. Affixing an electrode pen to a mechanical arm allows for programmed 3-dimensional printing of hydrogels. Figure 2 shows examples of both stationary and mobile electrochemical fabrication techniques.
Recent advances in potentiostat production have made potentiostats available which are small, do-it-yourself, portable and cheap allowing for greater access for fabrication techniques [31,32,33,34]. This review will discuss some of the challenges that are shared between electrochemical hydrogel fabrication methods and how these have been addressed. The methods used to analyse gels will also be highlighted.
1.1 Applications of electrochemically fabricated hydrogels
Electrochemical hydrogel fabrication provides new opportunities for constructing at the micro- and nanoscale [35, 36]. Unlike gels formed in bulk which take the shape of the container they are poured into when liquid, electrochemically fabricated hydrogels can be formed on any conductive surface which provides a high level of spatiotemporal control. Gels can then be used to encapsulate enzymes, nanomaterials, drugs or cells as shown in Fig. 3 [37]. The potential for new opportunities for constructing at the micro- and nano-scale is attracting increasing attention in a large range of potential applications, including synthesis of conducting polymers [38]; for use in regenerative medicine [39, 40]; and the rapidly growing field of biosensors and microfluidic devices [41,42,43,44,45]; Electrochemically fabricated hydrogels can also be used to create antibacterial surfaces [46] and the coating of medical implants [47, 48].
2 Biological versus synthetic
There are a wide range of gelators that can be used to form hydrogels on an electrode surface. These include synthetic gelators and materials deriving from biological sources [12]. Chitosan was the first biopolymer to be formed on an electrode surface [51]. When using gelators originating from biological sources, there can be issues of batch-to-batch variation such as inconsistencies in molecular weight, purity and possible contamination. All of these can mean that the final hydrogels have irreproducible properties. Other production-related issues with the use of chitosan produced from shellfish is the seasonality of the industrial harvest. When using naturally-occurring chitosan, there is also a significant risk of reticent anaphylaxis which limits clinical use [52]. Purified biologically-sourced gelators can of course be formed but this comes at an inflated cost.
Synthetic gelators can be used to mimic biological materials [53, 54].These materials are usually based on covalently cross-linked polymer networks such as TrueGel3D™, Hystem® and HydroMAtrix™. Other synthetic hydrogels are held together with only physical interactions without the need for covalent cross linkers, such as low molecular weight gelators [55,56,57]. These gelators form reproducible gels in both the bulk [58], and fabricated on an electrode [11]. Hydrogels formed using low molecular weight gelators can also be converted into polymers on an electrode [38]. The biocompatibility of hydrogels formed from synthetic gelators can be somewhat challenging. In order for the gels to be used in cell culture, they must be formed at a compatible pH (generally physiological pH) and cannot contain any materials that would induce cell death. Forming gels at physiological pH is difficult with certain pH triggered methods as they usually results in gels with high or too low a pH [2].
For biological applications, both biologically derived and synthetic gels are often required to be placed in pH buffered cell media. The contents of cell media can include a mixture of glucose, antibiotics and buffered salt solutions. It is necessary therefore to test whether the effect of leaving the gels in a buffered solution affects the properties which we aim to control electrochemically.
2.1 Spatiotemporal control
Spatiotemporal control is the term used to describe the fabrication of a gel by controlling the parameters of time and space, such as controlling the rate of growth and the resulting size and thickness of the gel.
Hydrogels can be prepared on a range of electrode surfaces with any geometry, within a stationary electrode system, they can also be sketched, or printed using a mobile electrode pen [30, 59]. Stationary electrodes can be any shape and size on any length scale with the desired gel forming on the surface [1, 60, 61]. Conductive glass electrodes such as ITO and FTO can be etched to allow for regions of conductive/non-conductive areas [11], which results in gels only forming on the conductive regions [2, 11]. As well as forming gels in a two-dimensional plane, three-dimensional gels can be formed by simply bending a two-dimensional electrode into an additional plane [7]. Bressner et al. [7] showed a bent copper wire forming a closed loop electrode could be used to prepare the first electro fabrication of silk gels in three-dimensions. Photocathodes can also be used to produce patterned gels. The photocathodes selectively produce electrode surface reactions. Jiang and co-workers controlled the illumination pattern on a digital micro-mirror device in order to produce chitosan gels with difference shaped and sizes and as well as multiplexed micro-patterning [62].
Electrode pens can be formed from a variety of conductive materials and sizes. Su et al. formed a cathodic electrode pen from a stainless-steel acupuncture needle. The pen once placed on the surface of a bulk gelator solution can create regions were gelation is triggered. The writing speed and holding time can determine the thickness of the gels formed [30]. Figure 4 shows examples of the spatial temporal control from both stationary and mobile electrodes [18, 30].
Further spatiotemporal control can be achieved by controlling the electrical input to the electrode. Yan et al. have shown the formation of chitosan on a glassy carbon electrode can be controlled by oscillating electrical signals. This oscillation in electrical signal enables segmented structures to be generated, which are consistent with the clock and wavefront framework [63]. Controlling the electrical signals also allows for the sequential assembly of gelators. This can be applied to multicomponent gelators systems on the same electrode. Controlling the applied current can selectively trigger individual gelators within multicomponent systems as Raeburn et al. [11] have shown for pH triggered gelators of differing pKa values. Layered structures can also be prepared on separate electrodes within the same system as demonstrated by Wang et al. [64]. Sequential assembly of gels is of particular interest for microfluidic channels for lab-on-a-chip applications [64], and for use as conductive materials.
2.2 Homogeneity
In order to form reproducible gels, there needs to be homogeneity within gel phases [58]. This can be difficult to analyse. Fabrication methods which produce gas on the electrode surface may form bubbles within the gel or leave holes were the gas has diffused out. This can compromise mechanical stiffness, gel clarity and can act as an electrical insulator that slows down continued gel formation [7, 65]. A camera can be used to analyse the size and distribution of the bubbles within the gel which can keep track of bubbles forming and analyse the size of the gel [2]. Kaplan and Migliaresi have both shown how the rate of bubble formation can be minimised by regulating the current within solution [5, 65].
2.3 Removing the gel from the electrode surface
In the cases were the gels do not form any chemical bonds to the electrode surface, they can be removed by gently tapping or scraping the gel from the surface [7]. In addition, there are methods which can remove gels from a surface remotely. These methods either reduce the solubility of the gelator at the electrode surface and gel interface [66], or by producing a gas which pushes the gel off of the electrode [61]. This can be done by reversing the applied current [65]. Payne and co-workers have shown how pH switch gels formed by the reduction of water can be removed from the surface of the electrode by reversing the potential where the oxidation of water occurs causing acidification. This induced acidification of chitosan gels can induce multilayer disassembly [67]. Potential reversal has also been used to remove gels from a patterned microelectrode surface as shown in Fig. 5 [61].
3 Gel growth analysis
3.1 pH determination
Measuring the pH during gelation is important for pH triggered gels as the rate of pH change determines the rate of gelation [30]. As gelation occurs once the pH has passed the pKa of a pH-triggered gelator [68], the rate of pH change controls the rate of gelation which can yield gels of different physical properties [69].
It is difficult to measure the pH of a gel or the bulk solution when a current is flowing, as the current interferes with the moving ions in the pH electrode tip. Although this can provide pH data with a range of error depending upon the concentration of ions in solution, the pH values are still usually reported. pH indicators such as universal indicator and methyl red can be added to the gelator solution which changes colour as the pH is changed [7, 8]. This can provide a simple approach to determine areas of different pH. Using an indicator is useful for measuring parts of the gel visible by the human eye or by spectrometry. However, to the best of our knowledge, a method to determine the exact pH at the electrode and gel interface during gelation has not been identified.
4 Optical imaging of electrofabricated hydrogels
In situ imaging is an essential tool to analyse gel growth. Images can be used to analyse the rate of gel growth and determine the shape and size of the gel [1, 2, 11, 63]. As the development of mobile phone camera resolution has progressed, in some cases a phone camera is all that is needed to record rate of gel growth, shape and area. Open source software such as ImageJ can be used to trace the outline of the gel on the electrode surface and calculates its area as well as analysing any bubble formation in the gel (Fig. 6) [70].
5 Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)
Advances in in situ analysis techniques for gelation such as NMR [71,72,73] have limited use in electrochemical gels due to the inability to physically apply the methods. Wallace et al. [71,72,73] have shown how NMR can be used to determine the gelator pKa and pore size in bulk gelation. Development of these techniques for an electrochemical system would allow for greater analysis of gelation kinetics. For gels formed on an electrode, the self-assembly process can be followed by NMR visible gelator molecules e.g. approximately smaller than 25 kDa [74]. Large gelators experience slow tumbling in solution which leads to faster relaxation of transverse magnetisation, this causes the gelator to appear invisible in the spectra [74]. NMR self-assembly analysis involves removing the gel from the electrode surface at different time points during gelation, freeze drying the gels then placing in a deuterated solvent and analysed using NMR spectroscopy. The NMR peaks are then integrated against a known standard to determine gelator concentration. [11, 75]. Following the self-assembly during gelation allows for the content of the gel to be identified, which is of particular use for multicomponent systems as shown in Fig. 7.
5.1 Gel property analysis
This section will evaluate how electrochemical fabricated gels are currently analysed. In order to analyse gels, the techniques must not distort the physical properties of the material [76]. An ideal method for gel analysis must have the following characteristics:
Represent the three-dimensional hydrogel, not just the surface.
Be a process that does not require environmental conditions that modify the materials morphology to an unknown degree e.g. cryogenically freezing, swelling, pressure changes or placing in a salt buffered solution.
Have a sample preparation process that does not alter the matrix or self-assembly process e.g. avoid methods where samples are manually cut after freezing, coated in gold, or the addition of probe particles.
If these conditions are not met, analysis results can end up inaccurate. For example, Mears et al. showed how the drying of gels can affect the structural network. Comparing the fibre width of a low molecular weight gel using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), cryo-transmission electron miscroscopy (cryo-TEM) and small angle neutron scattering (SANS) measurements and revealed how the fibre widths differed between gels that were hydrated and dried [77].
5.2 Characterisation of hydrogel nano/microstructures
Electron imaging techniques such as SEM or TEM can produce images of dried gel surfaces to reveal the morphologies of micelles, polymers and the overlapping of fibres [78]. From these images, the analysis of fibre width, length and pore size are often acquired. Three-dimensional images can be obtained by cryogenically freezing the gels then fracturing the matrix to reveal a cross section [79]. However, the disadvantages of using SEM, TEM and other in situ techniques include the vacuuming or cryogenically freezing of the gels. The collapsing of the matrix due to vacuum and the expansion of the matrix due to water freezing can dramatically modify the gels morphology making it difficult to make accurate quantitative analysis of the gels without an unknown degree of error [77]. However, SEM imaging can be useful to qualitatively analyse different structural regions within a gel as shown in Fig. 8 [63].
Quantitative polarised light microscopy (qPLM) can be used to identify microstructural organisation within fabricated gels. Yan et al. used Brillouinn spectroscopy to show how gradients in mechanical properties and differences within internal patters can be identified during and after gelation. By combining both qPLM and Brilloiun spectroscopy, they were able to clarify the mechanisms responsible for the emergence of segmented structure during chitosan’s electrodeposition (Fig. 9).
5.3 Diffraction
Conventional X-ray diffraction generally gives broad, amorphous patterns for gels meaning that analysis is difficult. However, it can be a useful technique to identify fabricated crystalline structures within an amorphous gel such as chitosan’s self-assembly into crystals [30]. Small angle scattering can be used to analyse gel properties such as fibre length, shape, fractional dimensions, alignment and size. Small angle scattering can be applied on many length scales ranging from 0.1 to 1000 nm which can be combined to observe a large range [80]. In bulk gelation, contrast matching of gel fibres can be used to differentiate different components within a multicomponent system [69]. This can be used to determine if fibres are composed of self-sorted or co-sorted gelators [69]. Methods such as these would be useful to analyse electrochemical gelation.
5.4 Rheology
Oscillatory rheology can be used to determine homogeneity, stiffness and strength of a gel [30]. Si et al. used a rheological approach, tensiometry to show how the mechanical properties of a chitosan gel were enhancement by using a cathodic writing pen versus a chitosan gel that was unwritten [30].
Rheology is an extremely useful tool for biofabricated gels. The stiffness of the gels amongst other factors controls the differentiation pathway of stem cells into tissue [81]. For those with a biology background, rheology data is usually provided giving the Young’s modulus, whereas a chemical/engineering background usually provides the storage and loss moduli which can cause some confusion. However, the relationship between the two is relatively simple and shown in Eqs. 1 and 2.
where E represents Young’s modulus, G* the complex modulus, v the Poisson ratio which is usually 0.5 for a hydrogel [82], i the imaginary component, G′ the storage modulus and G″ the loss modulus.
6 Conclusion
The past decade has seen a rise in electrochemical fabrication developments such as advances in spatiotemporal control, gelator development, and the identification of new fabrication methods. These advances may provide a way to achieve an ethical, reproducible and accurate biological cell model such as representing the blood brain barrier were other bulk gels have failed. Improvements in existing and the development of new analytical methods of gel characterisation as well as the improvement in the methods accessibility will allow scientists from all backgrounds to communicate their research more accurately and efficiently, propelling the field from bench to market in the not so distant future.
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ERC thanks the University of Glasgow for a studentship.
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Cross, E.R. The electrochemical fabrication of hydrogels: a short review. SN Appl. Sci. 2, 397 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s42452-020-2194-5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s42452-020-2194-5