| Literature DB >> 34110665 |
Xiangyu Liang1, Guangda Chen1, Shaoting Lin2, Jiajun Zhang1, Liu Wang3, Pei Zhang1, Zeyu Wang4, Zongbao Wang4, Yang Lan5, Qi Ge1, Ji Liu1,6,7.
Abstract
Nature builds biological materials from limited ingredients, however, with unparalleled mechanical performances compared to artificial materials, by harnessing inherent structures across multi-length-scales. In contrast, synthetic material design overwhelmingly focuses on developing new compounds, and fails to reproduce the mechanical properties of natural counterparts, such as fatigue resistance. Here, a simple yet general strategy to engineer conventional hydrogels with a more than 100-fold increase in fatigue thresholds is reported. This strategy is proven to be universally applicable to various species of hydrogel materials, including polysaccharides (i.e., alginate, cellulose), proteins (i.e., gelatin), synthetic polymers (i.e., poly(vinyl alcohol)s), as well as corresponding polymer composites. These fatigue-resistant hydrogels exhibit a record-high fatigue threshold over most synthetic soft materials, making them low-cost, high-performance, and durable alternatives to soft materials used in those circumstances including robotics, artificial muscles, etc.Entities:
Keywords: anisotropy; crack propagation; fatigueresistance; freeze casting; hydrogels
Year: 2021 PMID: 34110665 DOI: 10.1002/adma.202102011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849