2008 Annual Meeting
(5g) Conductive Polymer and Hydrogel Composites as Functional Biomaterials
Authors
Through this research we seek to develop a new sensing mechanism for the detection of human proteins and peptides relevant to specific disease states. Development of fabrication methods, materials characterization, functionality testing and assessment of biocompatibility have all been performed on a type of water-dispersible polyaniline (PANI). This material is highly conductive and solutions-processable due to the synthesis process, which involves templating the aniline monomer on a polyelectrolyte chain, in this case poly(2-acrylamido-2-methylpropane sulfonic acid) (PAAMPSA), to synthesize PANI-PAAMPSA. The processability enables integration into of the PANI-PAAMPSA as a component in a water-based hydrogel polymerization to form a semi-IPN with conductive properties.
This work was supported by the NSF-IGERT program grant DGE-0333080.