| Literature DB >> 29534320 |
Riku Takahashi1, Tao Lin Sun2,3, Yoshiyuki Saruwatari4, Takayuki Kurokawa2,3, Daniel R King2,3, Jian Ping Gong2,3.
Abstract
Reinforcing hydrogels with a rigid scaffold is a promising method to greatly expand the mechanical and physical properties of hydrogels. One of the challenges of creating hydrogel composites is the significant stress that occurs due to swelling mismatch between the water-swollen hydrogel matrix and the rigid skeleton in aqueous media. This stress can cause physical deformation (wrinkling, buckling, or fracture), preventing the fabrication of robust composites. Here, a simple yet versatile method is introduced to create "macroscale" hydrogel composites, by utilizing a rigid reinforcing phase that can relieve stress-induced deformation. A low-melting-point alloy that can transform from a load-bearing solid state to a free-deformable liquid state at relatively low temperature is used as a reinforcing skeleton, which enables the release of any swelling mismatch, regardless of the matrix swelling degree in liquid media. This design can generally provide hydrogels with hybridized functions, including excellent mechanical properties, shape memory, and thermal healing, which are often difficult or impossible to achieve with single-component hydrogel systems. Furthermore, this technique enables controlled electrochemical reactions and channel-structure templating in hydrogel matrices. This work may play an important role in the future design of soft robots, wearable electronics, and biocompatible functional materials.Entities:
Keywords: composite materials; double-network gels; hydrogels; low-melting-point alloys; thermal responsive materials
Year: 2018 PMID: 29534320 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201706885
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849