Skin-like Material Developed for Wearables
10 September 2021
Jülich/Shanghai, 10 September 2021. Scientists at Forschungszentrum Jülich and Donghua University in Shanghai, China, have demonstrated a skin-like synthetic material intended to advance the development of so-called “wearables”, as well as smart clothing and artificial skin for robots. The proton-conducting synthetic material, a so-called elastomer, is far better than previous materials at replicating the elasticity of skin and its self-healing powers as well as its ability to stiffen when stretched. Up until now, these properties were difficult to obtain in one and the same material. This has now been made possible by combining two dynamic networks that interact with each other but react differently when under strain.
Wearables, miniature networked computers that are worn on the body, have been steadily growing in use over many years. Athletes, for example, use them to train precisely within their optimal performance range, and diabetics can use them to measure blood sugar levels. Numerous other applications are feasible if even smaller and more powerful sensors and devices can be developed that are more durable and comfortable to wear, such as those incorporated into clothing. Moreover, robot technology would also benefit from materials that can mimic the tactile functions of skin and are similarly hard-wearing.
The focus of this search centres on materials that are both elastic and robust, including among other things the ability to stiffen when under strain. Strain-stiffening means that a material becomes more stable when it is deformed. Many soft materials react in this way. In biological systems, this property protects against damage caused by excessive deformation. This often involves a combination of a strain-stiffening network of biological polymers in which other soft components are embedded.
Scientists are looking for ways to apply the concept to ion-conducting materials to enable new functionalities for wearables. However, most synthetic ionic conductors are strain-softening. For stretchable ionic conductors, there is often a conflict between elasticity, self-healing and strain-stiffening. In particular, the chemical binding properties responsible for self-healing are often difficult to reconcile with those that enable strain-stiffening. The former requires stable chemical bonds, whereas the latter requires bonds that can dynamically dissolve and re-structure. The researchers have now succeeded in resolving this conflict by drawing inspiration from biology.
The scientists from Shanghai produced mixtures, each made up of two polymer networks with mutually complementary properties. One network dissolves specific chemical bonds more quickly when subjected to strain than the second, which in its turn enables a complete reorganisation to take place, back into the original structure. Such experiments had already been performed, but in trials the researchers found a material with record-breaking properties. “Our best elastomer demonstrates ultra-high elongation of 1600%, excellent elastic recovery, strain-stiffening by an estimated factor of 24, and almost 100% self-healing,” Dr. Baohu Wu is pleased to report. “The presence of zwitterions also gives the ionic elastomers advantages in terms of protection from moisture and freezing temperatures, allowing the elastomers to stably conduct protons even in harsh conditions.”
The Jülich physicist used neutron scattering instruments operated by the Jülich Centre for Neutron Science at the Heinz Maier-Leibnitz Zentrum in Garching to investigate the microscopic structure of the materials examined. Discovering correlations between these types of structures and the desired properties helped the researchers to develop promising materials in a targeted manner.
Original publication:
Zhang, W., Wu, B., Sun, S. et al.
Skin-like mechanoresponsive self-healing ionic elastomer from supramolecular zwitterionic network. Nat Commun 12, 4082 (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-24382-4Further information:
Performance data of the neutron small angle scattering instrument 3 (KWS-3)