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Freezing Molecular Orientation under Stretch for High Mechanical Strength but Anisotropic Hydrogels
Author(s) -
Lin Peng,
Zhang Tingting,
Wang Xiaolong,
Yu Bo,
Zhou Feng
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
small
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.785
H-Index - 236
eISSN - 1613-6829
pISSN - 1613-6810
DOI - 10.1002/smll.201601893
Subject(s) - self healing hydrogels , materials science , ultimate tensile strength , composite material , mechanical strength , anisotropy , elastic modulus , polymer chemistry , optics , physics
The poor mechanical strength of hydrogels has largely limited their wide applications, and improving hydrogels' mechanical strength is a hot and important topic in the hydrogel research field. Although many successful strategies have been proposed to improve hydrogels' mechanical strength during the past decades, a hydrogel with a tensile stress surpassing dozens of mega Pascal is desirable, yet still a big challenge. To address this issue, the Fe 3+ ‐mediated physical crosslinking formed under stretch conditions was employed in a chemically crosslinked poly (acrylamide‐co‐acrylic acid) network to achieve a dual‐crosslinked hydrogel. The expected molecular orientation occurs under stretch and allows the maximumu chelating interaction between pendant carboxylic anions and Fe 3+ and molecules conformation being frozen, leading to the mechanical strength improving dramatically. As a result, an unprecedentedly high mechanical strength, but anisotropic dual‐crosslinked hydrogel was obtained. By optimizing the experimental parameters, the nominal tensile stress along pre‐stretching direction can reach as high as ≈40 MPa with elastic modulus of ≈40 MPa at large strain (>200%). In addition, the molecular orientation also leads to big difference of mechanical performance between parallel and perpendicular direction.