Amino acid-induced rapid gelation and mechanical reinforcement of hydrogels with low-hysteresis and self-recoverable and fatigue-resistant properties.
Xingqi LuoZhaoyang YuanXiangyan XieYuanjie XieHongyi LvJin ZhaoHao WangYuanji GaoLijuan ZhaoYi WangJinrong WuPublished in: Materials horizons (2023)
Hydrogels with rapid gelation ability and robust mechanical properties are highly desirable for nascent applications in biomedical, wearable electronic, industrial and agricultural fields. However, current rapid-gelation hydrogels are compromised by poor mechanical properties, complex design of precursor molecular structures and limited precursor species. Herein, we propose a facile and universal strategy to achieve rapid gelation, strengthening and toughening of free-radical polymerized hydrogels by introducing cheap and accessible amino acids. Amino acids not only activate persulfate to quickly produce free radicals and thus induce fast free radical polymerization, but also can form strong hydrogen bonds with the network chains to strengthen and toughen the hydrogels. For example, with the presence of L-serine, the acrylamide (AM) monomer shows rapid gelation within tens of seconds, and moreover the resulting hydrogel reaches a tensile strength of 0.45 MPa and a breaking strain of 2060%. More importantly, owing to the extremely dynamic feature of the hydrogen bonds between L-serine molecules and network chains, the hydrogel possesses the advantages of low hysteresis, rapid self-recovery capability and outstanding fatigue resistance. Furthermore, this strategy is general to a wide range of amino acids and monomers. We also demonstrate that this rapid, controllable and universal strategy for the fabrication of mechanically robust hydrogels holds tremendous potential for diverse practical applications, such as flexible electronic sensors and ultraviolet (UV)-blocking artificial skins.
Keyphrases
- amino acid
- drug delivery
- hyaluronic acid
- tissue engineering
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- wound healing
- drug release
- extracellular matrix
- risk assessment
- heavy metals
- oxidative stress
- mass spectrometry
- high resolution
- protein kinase
- sleep quality
- physical activity
- diabetic rats
- depressive symptoms
- reduced graphene oxide
- genetic diversity
- network analysis
- solid state
- solid phase extraction