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Lee, Dong Woog
Interfacial Physics and Chemistry Lab.
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Surface-initiated self-healing of polymers in aqueous media

Author(s)
Ahn, B. KollbeLee, Dong WoogIsraelachvili, Jacob N.Waite, J. Herbert
Issued Date
2014-09
DOI
10.1038/NMAT4037
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/18377
Fulltext
http://www.nature.com/nmat/journal/v13/n9/full/nmat4037.html
Citation
NATURE MATERIALS, v.13, pp.867 - 872
Abstract
Polymeric materials that intrinsically heal at damage sites under wet or moist conditions are urgently needed for biomedical and environmental applications(1-6). Although hydrogels with self-mending properties have been engineered by means of mussel-inspired metal-chelating catechol-functionalized polymer networks(7-10), biological self-healing in wet conditions, as occurs in self-assembled holdfast proteins in mussels and other marine organisms(11,12), is generally thought to involve more than reversible metal chelates. Here we demonstrate self-mending in metal-free water of synthetic polyacrylate and polymethacrylate materials that are surface-functionalized with mussel-inspired catechols. Wet self-mending of scission in these polymers is initiated and accelerated by hydrogen bonding between interfacial catechol moieties, and consolidated by the recruitment of other non-covalent interactions contributed by subsurface moieties. The repaired and pristine samples show similar mechanical properties, suggesting that the triggering of complete self-healing is enabled underwater by the formation of extensive catechol-mediated interfacial hydrogen bonds.
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
ISSN
1476-1122

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