Publications by authors named "Karan V Dikshit"

Slide-ring materials are polymer networks with mobile cross-links that exhibit impressive stress dissipation and fracture resistance owing to the pulley effect. On account of their remarkable ability to dissipate the energy of deformation, these materials have found their way into advanced materials such as abrasion-resistant coatings and elastic battery electrode binders. In this work, we explore the role of mobile cross-links on the properties of a biofriendly pressure-sensitive adhesive made using composites of cyclodextrin-based macromolecules and poly(lipoic acid).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This work reports the development of a mechanochemistry activated covalent conjugation (MACC) reaction that shows areas of interfacial failure in soft hydrogels. Hydrogels are prone to delamination from rigid substrates due to the competition between swelling and adhesion, which can lead to bonding failure in a mechanism similar to crack propagation in harder materials. In this work, reductive amination was shown to occur when a ketone-bearing fluorescein derivative was bonded to an amine-functionalized hydrogel, as both of these moieties were found to be necessary for covalent conjugation into the gel network.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

While tattooable nanotechnology for in-skin sensing and communication has been a popular concept in science fiction since the 1990s, the first tattooable intradermal nanosensors have only emerged in the past few years, and none have been demonstrated in human skin. We developed a photochromic tattoo that serves as an intradermal ultraviolet (UV) radiometer that provides naked-eye feedback about UV exposure in real time. These small tattoos, or "solar freckles", comprise dermally implanted colorimetric UV sensors in the form of nanoencapsulated leuco dyes that become more blue in color with increasing UV irradiance.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF