MXene Crosslinked Hydrogels with Low Hysteresis Conferred by Sliding Tangle Island Strategy.

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Key Laboratory of Advanced Packaging Materials and Technology of Hunan Province, Hunan University of Technology, Zhuzhou, 412007, China.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Single-network hydrogels are too weak for mechanical stress, while double-network hydrogels face hysteresis issues during stretching due to their design; both present challenges for creating tough yet flexible hydrogels.* -
  • The study proposes a new "sliding tangle island" method, using concentrated acrylamides and MXene to create entangled structures without chemical crosslinkers, improving stress transmission and energy dissipation.* -
  • The resulting hydrogel demonstrates impressive properties: around 900% stretchability, less than 7% hysteresis, and high toughness (1.34 MJ/m), making it suitable for applications like commercial hydrogel electrodes.*

Article Abstract

Single-network hydrogels are often too fragile to withstand mechanical loading, whereas double-network hydrogels typically exhibit significant hysteresis during cyclic stretching-releasing process due to the presence of a sacrificial network. Consequently, it is a considerable challenge for designing hydrogels that are both low in hysteresis and high in toughness for applications requiring dynamic mechanical loads. Herein, the study introduced a novel "sliding tangle island" strategy for creating tough and low-hysteresis hydrogels, which are prepared through in situ polymerization of highly concentrated acrylamides (AM) to form numerous entanglements within the MXene spacing without any chemical crosslinker. The MXene entangled with long polyacrylamide (PAM) chains to form tangle island that served as a relay station to transmit stress to neighboring molecular chains. This mechanism helps alleviate stress concentration and enhances energy dissipation efficiency, thereby reducing mechanical hysteresis. The resulting hydrogel exhibited exceptional properties, including high stretchability (≈900%), low hysteresis (less than 7%), high toughness (1.34 MJ m), and excellent sensing performance to rival the commercial hydrogel electrode. Therefore, this work sheds light on feasible design of energy dissipation structure to reduce the hysteresis of the composite hydrogels.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/smll.202401622DOI Listing

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