Supergravity-Steered Generic Manufacturing of Nanosheets-Embedded Nanocomposite Hydrogel with Highly Oriented, Heterogeneous Architecture.
Guang-Chang XuYihan NieHao-Nan LiWan-Long LiWan-Ting LinYu-Ren XueKai LiYu FangHong-Qing LiangHao-Cheng YangHaifei ZhanChao ZhangChaofeng LüZhi-Kang XuPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2024)
Designing nanocomposite hydrogels with oriented nanosheets has emerged as a promising toolkit to achieve preferential performances that go beyond their disordered counterparts. Although current fabrication strategies via electric/magnetic force fields have made remarkable achievements, they necessitate special properties of nanosheets and suffer from an inferior orientation degree of nanosheets. Herein, a facile and universal approach is discovered to elaborate MXene-based nanocomposite hydrogels with highly oriented, heterogeneous architecture by virtue of supergravity to replace conventional force fields. The key to such architecture is to leverage bidirectional, force-tunable attributes of supergravity containing coupled orthogonal shear and centrifugal force field for steering high-efficient movement, pre-orientation, and stacking of MXene nanosheets in the bottom. Such a synergetic effect allows for yielding heterogeneous nanocomposite hydrogels with a high-orientation MXene-rich layer (orientation degree, f = 0.83) and a polymer-rich layer. The authors demonstrate that MXene-based nanocomposite hydrogels leverage their high-orientation, heterogeneous architecture to deliver an extraordinary electromagnetic interference shielding effectiveness of 55.2 dB at 12.4 GHz yet using a super-low MXene of 0.3 wt%, surpassing most hydrogels-based electromagnetic shielding materials. This versatile supergravity-steered strategy can be further extended to arbitrary nanosheets including MoS 2 , GO, and C 3 N 4 , offering a paradigm in the development of oriented nanocomposites.
Keyphrases
- reduced graphene oxide
- drug delivery
- hyaluronic acid
- tissue engineering
- gold nanoparticles
- visible light
- quantum dots
- drug release
- extracellular matrix
- single molecule
- wound healing
- molecular dynamics
- molecular dynamics simulations
- randomized controlled trial
- systematic review
- room temperature
- metal organic framework
- carbon nanotubes