Toughening hydrogels through force-triggered chemical reactions that lengthen polymer strands

<jats:title>Longer and stronger; stiff but not brittle</jats:title> <jats:p> Hydrogels are highly water-swollen, cross-linked polymers. Although they can be highly deformed, they tend to be weak, and methods to strengthen or toughen them tend to reduce stret...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wang, Zi, Zheng, Xujun, Ouchi, Tetsu, Kouznetsova, Tatiana B, Beech, Haley K, Av-Ron, Sarah, Matsuda, Takahiro, Bowser, Brandon H, Wang, Shu, Johnson, Jeremiah A, Kalow, Julia A, Olsen, Bradley D, Gong, Jian Ping, Rubinstein, Michael, Craig, Stephen L
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/141093
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Summary:<jats:title>Longer and stronger; stiff but not brittle</jats:title> <jats:p> Hydrogels are highly water-swollen, cross-linked polymers. Although they can be highly deformed, they tend to be weak, and methods to strengthen or toughen them tend to reduce stretchability. Two papers now report strategies to create tough but deformable hydrogels (see the Perspective by Bosnjak and Silberstein). Wang <jats:italic>et al</jats:italic> . introduced a toughening mechanism by storing releasable extra chain length in the stiff part of a double-network hydrogel. A high applied force triggered the opening of cycling strands that were only activated at high chain extension. Kim <jats:italic>et al</jats:italic> . synthesized acrylamide gels in which dense entanglements could be achieved by using unusually low amounts of water, cross-linker, and initiator during the synthesis. This approach improves the mechanical strength in solid form while also improving the wear resistance once swollen as a hydrogel. —MSL </jats:p>