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Macromolecule conformational shaping for extreme mechanical programming of polymorphic hydrogel fibers

Engineering and Technology

Macromolecule conformational shaping for extreme mechanical programming of polymorphic hydrogel fibers

X. Wang, K. H. Chan, et al.

This exciting research introduces a novel strategy for mechanically programming polymorphic hydrogel fiber devices, utilizing a pH-dependent antisolvent phase separation to create microfibers with tunable mechanical properties. The work of Xiao-Qiao Wang and colleagues reveals potential applications in large-strain sensors and energy harvesting across extreme conditions.... show more
Abstract
Mechanical properties of hydrogels are crucial to emerging devices and machines for wearables, robotics and energy harvesters. Various polymer network architectures and interactions have been explored for achieving specific mechanical characteristics, however, extreme mechanical property tuning of single-composition hydrogel material and deployment in integrated devices remain challenging. Here, we introduce a macromolecule conformational shaping strategy that enables mechanical programming of polymorphic hydrogel fiber-based devices. Conformation of the single-composition polyelectrolyte macromolecule is controlled to evolve from coiling to extending states via a pH-dependent antisolvent phase separation process. The resulting structured hydrogel microfibers reveal extreme mechanical integrity, including modulus spanning four orders of magnitude, brittleness to ultrastretchability, and plasticity to anelasticity and elasticity. Our approach yields hydrogel microfibers of varied macromolecule conformations that can be built-in layered formats, enabling the translation of extraordinary, realistic hydrogel electronic applications, i.e., large strain (1000%) and ultrafast responsive (∼30 ms) fiber sensors in a robotic bird, large deformations (6000%) and antifreezing helical electronic conductors, and large strain (700%) capable Janus springs energy harvesters in wearables.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jun 11, 2022
Authors
Xiao-Qiao Wang, Kwok Hoe Chan, Wanheng Lu, Tianpeng Ding, Serene Wen Ling Ng, Yin Cheng, Tongtao Li, Minghui Hong, Benjamin C. K. Tee, Ghim Wei Ho
Tags
macromolecule
polymorphic hydrogels
mechanical properties
phase separation
fiber-based devices
tunable materials
energy harvesters
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