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Vascular smooth muscle-inspired architecture enables soft yet tough self-healing materials for durable capacitive strain-sensor.

Fuyao SunLongFei LiuTong LiuXueBin WangQi QiZuSheng HangKai ChenJianhua XuJiajun Fu
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
Catastrophically mechanical failure of soft self-healing materials is unavoidable due to their inherently poor resistance to crack propagation. Here, with a model system, i.e., soft self-healing polyurea, we present a biomimetic strategy of surpassing trade-off between soft self-healing and high fracture toughness, enabling the conversion of soft and weak into soft yet tough self-healing material. Such an achievement is inspired by vascular smooth muscles, where core-shell structured Galinstan micro-droplets are introduced through molecularly interfacial metal-coordinated assembly, resulting in an increased crack-resistant strain and fracture toughness of 12.2 and 34.9 times without sacrificing softness. The obtained fracture toughness is up to 111.16 ± 8.76 kJ/m 2 , even higher than that of Al and Zn alloys. Moreover, the resultant composite delivers fast self-healing kinetics (1 min) upon local near-infrared irradiation, and possesses ultra-high dielectric constants (~14.57), thus being able to be fabricated into sensitive and self-healing capacitive strain-sensors tolerant towards cracks potentially evolved in service.
Keyphrases
  • smooth muscle
  • healthcare
  • radiation therapy
  • risk assessment
  • molecular dynamics simulations