| Literature DB >> 31209044 |
Hyesung Cho1,2, Gaoxiang Wu1, Jason Christopher Jolly1, Nicole Fortoul3,4, Zhenping He3,4, Yuchong Gao1, Anand Jagota5,4, Shu Yang6.
Abstract
Adhesives are ubiquitous in daily life and industrial applications. They usually fall into one of two classes: strong but irreversible (e.g., superglues) or reversible/reusable but weak (e.g., pressure-sensitive adhesives and biological and biomimetic surfaces). Achieving both superstrong adhesion and reversibility has been challenging. This task is particularly difficult for hydrogels that, because their major constituent is liquid water, typically do not adhere strongly to any material. Here, we report a snail epiphragm-inspired adhesion mechanism where a polymer gel system demonstrates superglue-like adhesion strength (up to 892 N⋅cm-2) that is also reversible. It is applicable to both flat and rough target surfaces. In its hydrated state, the softened gel conformally adapts to the target surface by low-energy deformation, which is locked upon drying as the elastic modulus is raised from hundreds of kilopascals to ∼2.3 GPa, analogous to the action of the epiphragm of snails. We show that in this system adhesion strength is based on the material's intrinsic, especially near-surface, properties and not on any near-surface structure, providing reversibility and ease of scaling up for practical applications.Entities:
Keywords: intrinsically reversible; polymer gels; shape adaptation; snail epiphragm; superstrong adhesion
Year: 2019 PMID: 31209044 PMCID: PMC6628786 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1818534116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205