| Literature DB >> 30259576 |
Yachao Zhang1, Ying Li2, Yanlei Hu1, Xuelin Zhu3, Yaowei Huang2,4, Zhen Zhang1, Shenglong Rao1, Zhijiang Hu1, Weixin Qiu1, Yulong Wang1, Guoqiang Li1,5, Liang Yang1, Jiawen Li1, Dong Wu1, Wenhao Huang1, Chengwei Qiu2, Jiaru Chu1.
Abstract
Architectures of natural organisms especially plants largely determine their response to varying external conditions. Nature-inspired shape transformation of artificial materials has motivated academic research for decades due to wide applications in smart textiles, actuators, soft robotics, and drug delivery. A "self-growth" method of controlling femtosecond laser scanning on the surface of a prestretched shape-memory polymer to realize microscale localized reconfigurable architectures transformation is introduced. It is discovered that microstructures can grow out of the original surface by intentional control of localized laser heating and ablation, and resultant structures can be further tuned by adopting an asymmetric laser scanning strategy. A distinguished paradigm of reconfigurable architectures is demonstrated by combining the flexible and programmable laser technique with a smart shape-memory polymer. Proof-of-concept experiments are performed respectively in information encryption/decryption, and microtarget capturing/release. The findings reveal new capacities of architectures with smart surfaces in various interdisciplinary fields including anti-counterfeiting, microstructure printing, and ultrasensitive detection.Entities:
Keywords: femtosecond lasers; polymer self-growth; reconfigurable architectures; shape transformation; shape-memory polymers
Year: 2018 PMID: 30259576 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201803072
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849