Carbon emissions efficiency and abatement potential are calculated.2. Two perspectives of resource dependence and endowment are considered.3. The direct and indirect effects of natural resource abundance are analyzed.4. The carbon abatement potential in resource-based regions is still large.5. Promoting the transformation of industrial structures can obtain a double dividend.
Injectable, self-healing, and pH-responsive hydrogels are great intelligent drug delivery systems for controlled and localized therapeutic release. Hydrogels that show pH-sensitive behaviors in the mildly acidic range are ideal to be used for the treatment of regions showing local acidosis like tumors, wounds and infections. In this work, we present a facile preparation of an injectable, self-healing, and supersensitive pH-responsive nanocomposite hydrogel based on Schiff base reactions between aldehyde-functionalized polymers and amine-modified silica nanoparticles. The hydrogel shows fast gelation within 10 s, injectability, and rapid self-healing capability. Moreover, the hydrogel demonstrates excellent stability under neutral physiological conditions, while a sharp gel−sol transition is observed, induced by a faintly acidic environment, which is desirable for controlled drug delivery. The pH-responsiveness of the hydrogel is ultrasensitive, where the mechanical properties, hydrolytic degradation, and drug release behaviors can alter significantly when subjected to a slight pH change of 0.2. Additionally, the hydrogel's mechanical and pH-responsive properties can be readily tuned by its composition. Its excellent biocompatibility is confirmed by cytotoxicity tests toward human dermal fibroblast cells (HDFa). The novel injectable, self-healing, and sensitive pH-responsive hydrogel serves as a promising candidate as a localized drug carrier with controlled delivery capability, triggered by acidosis, holding great promise for cancer therapy, wound healing, and infection treatment.
A self-healing hydrogel ionic conductor has been developed by combining dynamic covalent chemistry with nanofiller reinforcement and micelle crosslinking, and used for sensing of diverse human activities.
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