In situ mechanical reinforcement of polymer hydrogels via metal-coordinated crosslink mineralization

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Abstract

Biological organic-inorganic materials remain a popular source of inspiration for bioinspired materials design and engineering. Inspired by the self-assembling metal-reinforced mussel holdfast threads, we tested if metal-coordinate polymer networks can be utilized as simple composite scaffolds for direct in situ crosslink mineralization. Starting with aqueous solutions of polymers end-functionalized with metal-coordinating ligands of catechol or histidine, here we show that inter-molecular metal-ion coordination complexes can serve as mineral nucleation sites, whereby significant mechanical reinforcement is achieved upon nanoscale particle growth directly at the metal-coordinate network crosslink sites.

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Kim, S., Regitsky, A. U., Song, J., Ilavsky, J., McKinley, G. H., & Holten-Andersen, N. (2021). In situ mechanical reinforcement of polymer hydrogels via metal-coordinated crosslink mineralization. Nature Communications, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-20953-7

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