| Literature DB >> 26413297 |
Niels Holten-Andersen1, Aditya Jaishankar2, Matthew Harrington3, Dominic E Fullenkamp4, Genevieve DiMarco1, Lihong He4, Gareth H McKinley2, Phillip B Messersmith4, Ka Yee C Lee1.
Abstract
Growing evidence supports a critical role of dynamic metal-coordination crosslinking in soft biological material properties such as self-healing and underwater adhesion1. Using bio-inspired metal-coordinating polymers, initial efforts to mimic these properties have shown promise2. Here we demonstrate how bio-inspired aqueous polymer network mechanics can be easily controlled via metal-coordination crosslink dynamics; metal ion-based crosslink stability control allows aqueous polymer network relaxation times to be finely tuned over several orders of magnitude. In addition to further biological material insights, our demonstration of this compositional scaling mechanism should provide inspiration for new polymer material property-control designs.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 26413297 PMCID: PMC4582448 DOI: 10.1039/C3TB21374A
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mater Chem B ISSN: 2050-750X Impact factor: 6.331