Tough Supramolecular Polymer Networks with Extreme Stretchability and Fast Room-Temperature Self-Healing

Recent progress on highly tough and stretchable polymer networks has highlighted the potential of wearable electronic devices and structural biomaterials such as cartilage. For some given applications, a combination of desirable mechanical properties including stiffness, strength, toughness, damping...

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Published in:Advanced Materials
Main Author: Liu J.; Tan C.S.Y.; Yu Z.; Li N.; Abell C.; Scherman O.A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley-VCH Verlag 2017
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85017377629&doi=10.1002%2fadma.201605325&partnerID=40&md5=a0ee9ad31f012ef09e8623a32c5e4b6e
id 2-s2.0-85017377629
spelling 2-s2.0-85017377629
Liu J.; Tan C.S.Y.; Yu Z.; Li N.; Abell C.; Scherman O.A.
Tough Supramolecular Polymer Networks with Extreme Stretchability and Fast Room-Temperature Self-Healing
2017
Advanced Materials
29
22
10.1002/adma.201605325
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85017377629&doi=10.1002%2fadma.201605325&partnerID=40&md5=a0ee9ad31f012ef09e8623a32c5e4b6e
Recent progress on highly tough and stretchable polymer networks has highlighted the potential of wearable electronic devices and structural biomaterials such as cartilage. For some given applications, a combination of desirable mechanical properties including stiffness, strength, toughness, damping, fatigue resistance, and self-healing ability is required. However, integrating such a rigorous set of requirements imposes substantial complexity and difficulty in the design and fabrication of these polymer networks, and has rarely been realized. Here, we describe the construction of supramolecular polymer networks through an in situ copolymerization of acrylamide and functional monomers, which are dynamically complexed with the host molecule cucurbit[8]uril (CB[8]). High molecular weight, thus sufficient chain entanglement, combined with a small-amount dynamic CB[8]-mediated non-covalent crosslinking (2.5 mol%), yields extremely stretchable and tough supramolecular polymer networks, exhibiting remarkable self-healing capability at room temperature. These supramolecular polymer networks can be stretched more than 100× their original length and are able to lift objects 2000× their weight. The reversible association/dissociation of the host–guest complexes bestows the networks with remarkable energy dissipation capability, but also facile complete self-healing at room temperature. In addition to their outstanding mechanical properties, the networks are ionically conductive and transparent. The CB[8]-based supramolecular networks are synthetically accessible in large scale and exhibit outstanding mechanical properties. They could readily lead to the promising use as wearable and self-healable electronic devices, sensors and structural biomaterials. © 2017 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
Wiley-VCH Verlag
9359648
English
Article
All Open Access; Green Open Access
author Liu J.; Tan C.S.Y.; Yu Z.; Li N.; Abell C.; Scherman O.A.
spellingShingle Liu J.; Tan C.S.Y.; Yu Z.; Li N.; Abell C.; Scherman O.A.
Tough Supramolecular Polymer Networks with Extreme Stretchability and Fast Room-Temperature Self-Healing
author_facet Liu J.; Tan C.S.Y.; Yu Z.; Li N.; Abell C.; Scherman O.A.
author_sort Liu J.; Tan C.S.Y.; Yu Z.; Li N.; Abell C.; Scherman O.A.
title Tough Supramolecular Polymer Networks with Extreme Stretchability and Fast Room-Temperature Self-Healing
title_short Tough Supramolecular Polymer Networks with Extreme Stretchability and Fast Room-Temperature Self-Healing
title_full Tough Supramolecular Polymer Networks with Extreme Stretchability and Fast Room-Temperature Self-Healing
title_fullStr Tough Supramolecular Polymer Networks with Extreme Stretchability and Fast Room-Temperature Self-Healing
title_full_unstemmed Tough Supramolecular Polymer Networks with Extreme Stretchability and Fast Room-Temperature Self-Healing
title_sort Tough Supramolecular Polymer Networks with Extreme Stretchability and Fast Room-Temperature Self-Healing
publishDate 2017
container_title Advanced Materials
container_volume 29
container_issue 22
doi_str_mv 10.1002/adma.201605325
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85017377629&doi=10.1002%2fadma.201605325&partnerID=40&md5=a0ee9ad31f012ef09e8623a32c5e4b6e
description Recent progress on highly tough and stretchable polymer networks has highlighted the potential of wearable electronic devices and structural biomaterials such as cartilage. For some given applications, a combination of desirable mechanical properties including stiffness, strength, toughness, damping, fatigue resistance, and self-healing ability is required. However, integrating such a rigorous set of requirements imposes substantial complexity and difficulty in the design and fabrication of these polymer networks, and has rarely been realized. Here, we describe the construction of supramolecular polymer networks through an in situ copolymerization of acrylamide and functional monomers, which are dynamically complexed with the host molecule cucurbit[8]uril (CB[8]). High molecular weight, thus sufficient chain entanglement, combined with a small-amount dynamic CB[8]-mediated non-covalent crosslinking (2.5 mol%), yields extremely stretchable and tough supramolecular polymer networks, exhibiting remarkable self-healing capability at room temperature. These supramolecular polymer networks can be stretched more than 100× their original length and are able to lift objects 2000× their weight. The reversible association/dissociation of the host–guest complexes bestows the networks with remarkable energy dissipation capability, but also facile complete self-healing at room temperature. In addition to their outstanding mechanical properties, the networks are ionically conductive and transparent. The CB[8]-based supramolecular networks are synthetically accessible in large scale and exhibit outstanding mechanical properties. They could readily lead to the promising use as wearable and self-healable electronic devices, sensors and structural biomaterials. © 2017 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
publisher Wiley-VCH Verlag
issn 9359648
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Green Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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