Enzymatic Degradation of Acrylic Acid-Grafted Poly(butylene succinate-co-terephthalate) Nanocomposites Fabricated Using Heat Pressing and Freeze-Drying Techniques

Materials (Basel). 2020 Jan 14;13(2):376. doi: 10.3390/ma13020376.

Abstract

Biodegradable acrylic acid-grafted poly(butylene succinate-co-terephthalate) (g-PBST)/organically modified layered zinc phenylphosphonate (m-PPZn) nanocomposites were effectively fabricated containing covalent bonds between the g-PBST and m-PPZn. The results of wide-angle X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy revealed that the morphology of the g-PBST/m-PPZn nanocomposites contained a mixture of partially exfoliated or intercalated conformations. The isothermal crystallization behavior of the nanocomposites showed that the half-time for crystallization of 5 wt % g-PBST/m-PPZn nanocomposites was less than 1 wt % g-PBST/m-PPZn nanocomposites. This finding reveals that increasing the loading of m-PPZn can increase the crystallization rate of nanocomposites. Degradation tests of g-PBST/m-PPZn nanocomposites fabricated using the heat pressing and the freeze-drying process were performed by lipase from Pseudomonas sp. The degradation rates of g-PBST-50/m-PPZn nanocomposites were significantly lower than those of g-PBST-70/m-PPZn nanocomposites. The g-PBST-50 degraded more slowly due to the higher quantity of aromatic group and increased stiffness of the polymer backbone. The degradation rate of the freeze-drying specimens contained a more extremely porous conformation compared to those fabricated using the heat pressing process.

Keywords: biodegradable; composites; crystallization behavior; degradation; freeze-drying technique.; heat pressing technique.