Tough bonding of hydrogels to diverse non-porous surfaces.
Hyunwoo YukTeng ZhangShaoting LinGerman Alberto ParadaXuanhe ZhaoPublished in: Nature materials (2015)
In many animals, the bonding of tendon and cartilage to bone is extremely tough (for example, interfacial toughness ∼800 J m(-2); refs ,), yet such tough interfaces have not been achieved between synthetic hydrogels and non-porous surfaces of engineered solids. Here, we report a strategy to design tough transparent and conductive bonding of synthetic hydrogels containing 90% water to non-porous surfaces of diverse solids, including glass, silicon, ceramics, titanium and aluminium. The design strategy is to anchor the long-chain polymer networks of tough hydrogels covalently to non-porous solid surfaces, which can be achieved by the silanation of such surfaces. Compared with physical interactions, the chemical anchorage results in a higher intrinsic work of adhesion and in significant energy dissipation of bulk hydrogel during detachment, which lead to interfacial toughness values over 1,000 J m(-2). We also demonstrate applications of robust hydrogel-solid hybrids, including hydrogel superglues, mechanically protective hydrogel coatings, hydrogel joints for robotic structures and robust hydrogel-metal conductors.
Keyphrases
- tissue engineering
- hyaluronic acid
- drug delivery
- biofilm formation
- wound healing
- molecular dynamics simulations
- drug release
- staphylococcus aureus
- physical activity
- escherichia coli
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- mental health
- high resolution
- candida albicans
- gold nanoparticles
- bone mineral density
- minimally invasive
- body composition