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      Recent advances in composites based on cellulose derivatives for biomedical applications

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      Carbohydrate Polymers
      Elsevier BV

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          Cellulose: fascinating biopolymer and sustainable raw material.

          As the most important skeletal component in plants, the polysaccharide cellulose is an almost inexhaustible polymeric raw material with fascinating structure and properties. Formed by the repeated connection of D-glucose building blocks, the highly functionalized, linear stiff-chain homopolymer is characterized by its hydrophilicity, chirality, biodegradability, broad chemical modifying capacity, and its formation of versatile semicrystalline fiber morphologies. In view of the considerable increase in interdisciplinary cellulose research and product development over the past decade worldwide, this paper assembles the current knowledge in the structure and chemistry of cellulose, and in the development of innovative cellulose esters and ethers for coatings, films, membranes, building materials, drilling techniques, pharmaceuticals, and foodstuffs. New frontiers, including environmentally friendly cellulose fiber technologies, bacterial cellulose biomaterials, and in-vitro syntheses of cellulose are highlighted together with future aims, strategies, and perspectives of cellulose research and its applications.
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            Is Open Access

            Current development of biodegradable polymeric materials for biomedical applications

            In the last half-century, the development of biodegradable polymeric materials for biomedical applications has advanced significantly. Biodegradable polymeric materials are favored in the development of therapeutic devices, including temporary implants and three-dimensional scaffolds for tissue engineering. Further advancements have occurred in the utilization of biodegradable polymeric materials for pharmacological applications such as delivery vehicles for controlled/sustained drug release. These applications require particular physicochemical, biological, and degradation properties of the materials to deliver effective therapy. As a result, a wide range of natural or synthetic polymers able to undergo hydrolytic or enzymatic degradation is being studied for biomedical applications. This review outlines the current development of biodegradable natural and synthetic polymeric materials for various biomedical applications, including tissue engineering, temporary implants, wound healing, and drug delivery.
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              Biomedical applications of polymer-composite materials: a review

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                Author and article information

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                Journal
                Carbohydrate Polymers
                Carbohydrate Polymers
                Elsevier BV
                01448617
                November 2020
                November 2020
                : 247
                : 116683
                Article
                10.1016/j.carbpol.2020.116683
                32829811
                8c36d6ef-3f54-4b46-af09-a7dde0e43a31
                © 2020

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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