Chemo-Mechanics of Biodegradable Polymers
Lead Research Organisation:
UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
Department Name: Engineering Science
Abstract
Biodegradable polymers are materials designed to gradually break down into harmless constituents, and eventually disappear after having fulfilled their structural function. They are attracting enormous interest as potential replacements to traditional inert plastics in an attempt to address the plastic pollution problem. Applications include sustainable packaging, agricultural films and fishing nets, among others. Biodegradable polymers are also materials of choice for the design of temporary biomedical implantable devices (e.g. stents, sutures, or orthopaedic fixtures), thanks to their biocompatibility and tunable mechanical properties.
From an engineering design perspective, biodegradable polymers introduce new challenges due to seemingly contradictory requirements: they need to degrade relatively fast after having completed their intended function, but they must also maintain suitable mechanical properties (stiffness, strength, toughness) during service. Addressing these challenges requires a fundamental understanding of the coupled chemo-mechanical effects that dictate the performance of these materials. On the one hand, chemical degradation in water progressively decreases the mechanical properties of the material and causes swelling. On the other hand, mechanical stresses arising from externally-applied loads or geometrical imperfections significantly impact the degradation rate.
The proposed research aims to elucidate the role of mechanics in the chemical degradation of polymers in aqueous environment. This will be achieved by integrating systematic experiments on model polymers (PLA) degrading under loads and new physics-based constitutive models coupling mechanics and chemistry (hydrolysis reaction and diffusion of water and reaction products). The proposed models will be implemented within robust computational tools enabling the in-silico testing of biodegradable components under complex loading conditions up to failure. Ultimately, the research aims to answer the following question: "can we harness mechanical effects to control the degradation rate and failure mode for specific applications?".
The new knowledge, models and computational tools delivered by this project will be directly relevant for a broad range of applications in packaging, engineering and healthcare. Benefits include guidelines for the formulation of polymer systems with targeted mechanical and degradation properties, as well as design guidelines and predictive simulation tools at component level. These will reduce the need for costly and time-consuming trial-and-error experimental approaches, and improve performance and safety of biodegradable devices.
From an engineering design perspective, biodegradable polymers introduce new challenges due to seemingly contradictory requirements: they need to degrade relatively fast after having completed their intended function, but they must also maintain suitable mechanical properties (stiffness, strength, toughness) during service. Addressing these challenges requires a fundamental understanding of the coupled chemo-mechanical effects that dictate the performance of these materials. On the one hand, chemical degradation in water progressively decreases the mechanical properties of the material and causes swelling. On the other hand, mechanical stresses arising from externally-applied loads or geometrical imperfections significantly impact the degradation rate.
The proposed research aims to elucidate the role of mechanics in the chemical degradation of polymers in aqueous environment. This will be achieved by integrating systematic experiments on model polymers (PLA) degrading under loads and new physics-based constitutive models coupling mechanics and chemistry (hydrolysis reaction and diffusion of water and reaction products). The proposed models will be implemented within robust computational tools enabling the in-silico testing of biodegradable components under complex loading conditions up to failure. Ultimately, the research aims to answer the following question: "can we harness mechanical effects to control the degradation rate and failure mode for specific applications?".
The new knowledge, models and computational tools delivered by this project will be directly relevant for a broad range of applications in packaging, engineering and healthcare. Benefits include guidelines for the formulation of polymer systems with targeted mechanical and degradation properties, as well as design guidelines and predictive simulation tools at component level. These will reduce the need for costly and time-consuming trial-and-error experimental approaches, and improve performance and safety of biodegradable devices.
People |
ORCID iD |
Laurence Brassart (Principal Investigator / Fellow) |
Publications

Chen H
(2023)
Shear yielding and crazing in dry and wet amorphous PLA at body temperature
in Polymer

Pan Z
(2023)
A reaction-diffusion framework for hydrolytic degradation of amorphous polymers based on a discrete chain scission model.
in Acta biomaterialia
Description | The work funded through this research led to the development of a novel mathematical model to describe hydrolytic degradation in polymers, which is the dominant degradation pathway in many biodegradable polymers using in medicine, packaging and engineering. The model enables an accurate description of the degradation process at the level of individual chains, while is also suited for simulations of heterogeneous degradation at macroscopic scale. The model was validated by comparing its predictions to a range of experimental data. This model lays the foundations for a comprehensive modelling framework coupling mechanics and chemical degradation, which is currently under development. In parallel to this theoretical/computational work, this programme of research also characterised the mechanical properties of PLA (a commonly used biodegradable polymer) in dry and wet conditions. In particular, the work highlighted the dominating role of crazing in explaining the tensile response of this material. Current experimental work focuses on characterising the hydrolytic degradation of PLA in water, with and without applied forces. |
Exploitation Route | Theoretical and computational models can be used as a basis for further developments (generalisation or specialisation) in a broad range of problems related to polymer degradation. Our published experimental data can also serve the community in developing new constitutive models for polymers. |
Sectors | Agriculture Food and Drink Healthcare Manufacturing including Industrial Biotechology |
Description | DTP (managed by the Department of Engineering Science at the University of Oxford) |
Amount | £140,000 (GBP) |
Funding ID | DTP:IDS Research Studentship: Multiphysics modelling of biodegradable polymers |
Organisation | Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) |
Sector | Public |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 09/2023 |
End | 03/2027 |
Description | International Exchanges 2022 Cost Share (NSFC) |
Amount | £12,000 (GBP) |
Funding ID | IEC\NSFC\223221 |
Organisation | The Royal Society |
Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 03/2023 |
End | 03/2025 |
Title | Mathematical model of hydrolytic degradation in polymers |
Description | The model couples a discrete chain scission model at mesoscale to a continuum reaction-diffusion modelling framework at macroscopic scale, allowing the modelling of heterogeneous degradation by hydrolysis in polymers. The model accounts for various chain scission mechanisms and for autocatalysis. The software implementing the model is freely available to download. |
Type Of Material | Computer model/algorithm |
Year Produced | 2023 |
Provided To Others? | Yes |
Impact | This model for hydrolytic degradation underpins the development of a more comprehensive modelling framework coupling mechanics and degradation, currently under development in my group. |
URL | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2023.06.021 |