Conducting Composite Material Based on Chitosan and Single-Wall Carbon Nanotubes for Cellular Technologies

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Abstract

Biocompatible electrically conducting chitosan-based films filled with single-wall carbon nanotubes were obtained. Atomic force microscopic studies of the free surface topography revealed a change in the morphology of chitosan films filled with single-wall carbon nanotubes. Introducing 0.5 wt.% of single-wall carbon nanotubes into chitosan results in an increase in tensile strength of the films (up to ~180 MPa); the tensile strain values also rise up to ~60%. It was demonstrated that chitosan films containing 0.1–3.0 wt.% of single-wall carbon nanotubes have higher conductivity (10 S/m) than pure chitosan films (10−11 S/m). The investigation of electrical stimulation of human dermal fibroblasts on chitosan/single-wall carbon nanotubes film scaffolds showed that the biological effect of cell electrical stimulation depends on the content of single-walled carbon nanotubes in the chitosan matrix.

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Kodolova-Chukhontseva, V. V., Shishov, M. A., Kolbe, K. A., Smirnova, N. V., Dobrovol’skaya, I. P., Dresvyanina, E. N., … Yudin, V. E. (2022). Conducting Composite Material Based on Chitosan and Single-Wall Carbon Nanotubes for Cellular Technologies. Polymers, 14(16). https://doi.org/10.3390/polym14163287

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