A strategy for tough and fatigue-resistant hydrogels via loose cross-linking and dense dehydration-induced entanglements

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Abstract

Outstanding overall mechanical properties are essential for the successful utilization of hydrogels in advanced applications such as human-machine interfaces and soft robotics. However, conventional hydrogels suffer from fracture toughness-stiffness conflict and fatigue threshold-stiffness conflict, limiting their applicability. Simultaneously enhancing the fracture toughness, fatigue threshold, and stiffness of hydrogels, especially within a homogeneous single network structure, has proven to be a formidable challenge. In this work, we overcome this challenge through the design of a loosely cross-linked hydrogel with slight dehydration. Experimental results reveal that the slightly-dehydrated, loosely cross-linked polyacrylamide hydrogel, with an original/current water content of 87%/70%, exhibits improved mechanical properties, which is primarily attributed to the synergy between the long-chain structure and the dense dehydration-induced entanglements. Importantly, the creation of these microstructures does not require intricate design or processing. This simple approach holds significant potential for hydrogel applications where excellent anti-fracture and fatigue-resistant properties are necessary.

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Zhong, D., Wang, Z., Xu, J., Liu, J., Xiao, R., Qu, S., & Yang, W. (2024). A strategy for tough and fatigue-resistant hydrogels via loose cross-linking and dense dehydration-induced entanglements. Nature Communications, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-50364-3

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