Dynamic Creation of 3D Hydrogel Architectures via Selective Swelling Programmed by Interfacial Bonding

The topological features of material surfaces are crucial to the emergence of functions based on characteristic architectures. Among them, the combination of surface architectures and soft materials, which are highly deformable and flexible, has great potential as regards developing functional mater...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inACS applied materials & interfaces Vol. 11; no. 31; pp. 28267 - 28277
Main Authors Takahashi, Riku, Miyazako, Hiroki, Tanaka, Aya, Ueno, Yuko
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 07.08.2019
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Summary:The topological features of material surfaces are crucial to the emergence of functions based on characteristic architectures. Among them, the combination of surface architectures and soft materials, which are highly deformable and flexible, has great potential as regards developing functional materials toward providing/enhancing advanced functions such as switchability and variability. Therefore, a simple yet versatile method for creating three-dimensional (3D) architectures based on soft materials is strongly required. In this study, hydrogels are selected as the soft materials and hydrogel film/rigid substrate layer composites are fabricated to obtain a 3D hydrogel architecture based on swelling instability. When a hydrogel film weakly attached to a rigid substrate is exposed to water, swelling-driven compressive stress induces buckle-delamination of the film from the substrate. Utilizing the chemical modification of a rigid substrate and a conventional photolithography technique, the delamination location is successfully controlled, resulting in a high-aspect-ratio folding architecture at an arbitrary position. In addition, we systematically designed the delamination geometry and chemically tuned the swelling ratio of the hydrogel, leading to the discovery of several new morphology transitions and relationships between the morphologies and the controllable parameters. This work provides a new approach to fabricating highly programmable 3D architectures of soft materials.
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ISSN:1944-8244
1944-8252
DOI:10.1021/acsami.9b05552