Thermoresponsive Poly(methacrylamide)

polymer

Thermoresponsive poly(methacrylamide) is a synthetic polymer that changes its physical properties in response to temperature changes, making it useful for stimuli-responsive applications where material behavior must shift across a critical transition temperature. This material is primarily explored in research and emerging biomedical applications, including drug delivery systems, smart wound dressings, and tissue engineering scaffolds where temperature-triggered property changes enable on-demand release or mechanical response. Compared to conventional static polymers, thermoresponsive variants offer designers the ability to engineer systems that transition between states (swelling/collapse, hydrophobic/hydrophilic) without external mechanical intervention, though commercial adoption remains limited relative to established elastomers and thermoplastics.

controlled drug delivery systemsstimuli-responsive hydrogelssmart biomedical devicestissue engineering scaffoldsadaptive wound dressingsresearch and development applications

Compliance & Regulations

?UL 94?Conflict Free?RoHS?REACH?TSCA?Prop 65
PropertyValueUnitConditionsSource
Glass Transition Temperature(Tg)
K
Verified Unverified Low confidence (<80%) Link to source

Regulatory Screening

Environmental

Safety & Biocompatibility

RoHS, REACH, and Prop 65 statuses are validated against official substance lists (ECHA SVHC Candidate List, OEHHA Prop 65, RoHS Annex II). Other regulations are estimated from composition and material classification. All screening is a starting point for due diligence — always verify with your supplier before making compliance decisions.