A semi-transparent strong biomimetic wound healing material: zinc oxide and sodium alginate based bi-layer nanofiber membrane

Muzammil Kuddushi,Tanay Kumar,Hongyan Wu,Sherry Chen,Ben Bin Xu,Naved I. Malek,Larry D. Unsworth,Jiangtao Xu,Jiang Zhang,Xihua Wang,Xuehua Zhang

Published 2025 in Advanced Composites and Hybrid Materials

ABSTRACT

Wound healing is a critical process that significantly impacts patient health and places a substantial burden on healthcare systems. This study aimed to develop and evaluate transparent composite nanofibrous membranes with enhanced biological functionality as advanced wound dressing materials. We hypothesized that the incorporation of sodium alginate (NaAlg) or zinc oxide (ZnO) into electrospun polymer nanofibers, combined with the use of a conductive aluminum mesh during fiber collection, would result in membranes with locally aligned nanofibers, enabling optical transparency, biocompatibility, and mechanical properties. By using a 1.58 mm aluminum square mesh as a fiber collector during electrospinning of polycaprolactone (PCL)/ethylene vinyl alcohol (EVOH), we fabricated composite fiber membranes with varying concentrations of NaAlg (1–5% w/v) or ZnO (1–3% w/v). The use of the conductive mesh led to partial alignment of the nanofibers, enhancing light transmission and achieving notable optical transparency (up to 40% for NaAlg and 22% for ZnO). These membranes also exhibited a bi-layer structural configuration, robust mechanical properties (12–13 MPa), and optimal water vapor transmission rates (WVTR, 1400–1700 g/m2\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$$^{2}$$\end{document}/day). Biological assessments, including disc diffusion and cytotoxicity tests, demonstrated excellent biocompatibility (85–100% viability with HaCaT cells) and promising blood-clotting properties. These findings suggest that the developed nanofiber membranes, through their unique alignment-driven transparency and multifunctionality, can effectively monitor wound healing in real-time, absorb substantial exudate, and provide a protective barrier against environmental contaminants. This work highlights the novelty and potential of these nanofiber membranes as advanced biomaterials for diverse wound dressing applications.

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