TY - JOUR
T1 - Topological adhesion. I. Rapid and strong topohesives
AU - Steck, Jason
AU - Kim, Junsoo
AU - Yang, Jiawei
AU - Hassan, Sammy
AU - Suo, Zhigang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020
PY - 2020/9
Y1 - 2020/9
N2 - Topological adhesion, or topohesion for brevity, links two polymer networks, to be called adherends, even when the adherend networks carry no functional groups for chemical coupling. Uncrosslinked polymers, called stitch polymers, are spread between the two adherends. In response to a trigger, the stitch polymers form a stitch network in topological entanglement with both adherend networks. It is commonly believed that topohesion always takes a long time, but this is a misconceived myth. In principle, two adherends topohere strongly even when the stitch network entangles with each adherend network by a single polymer mesh size. The shallowness of this requirement dictates that topohesion is rate-limited by the gelation of the stitch network, not by the diffusion of the stitch polymers into the adherend networks. We illustrate this concept using two pieces of polyacrylamide hydrogels as adherends, an aqueous solution of cellulose as stitch polymers, and a change in the pH in the cellulose solution as a trigger. By varying the thickness of the cellulose solution, the time to topohere is tunable from seconds to hours. For a solution of thickness of 50 microns adhesion energy of 50 Jm−2 is attained in 60 s. These experimental findings dispel the myth, and shed light on the times to topohere reported in the literature. The art and science of topohesion provide fertile grounds for fundamental discovery and practical invention to enable unusual applications.
AB - Topological adhesion, or topohesion for brevity, links two polymer networks, to be called adherends, even when the adherend networks carry no functional groups for chemical coupling. Uncrosslinked polymers, called stitch polymers, are spread between the two adherends. In response to a trigger, the stitch polymers form a stitch network in topological entanglement with both adherend networks. It is commonly believed that topohesion always takes a long time, but this is a misconceived myth. In principle, two adherends topohere strongly even when the stitch network entangles with each adherend network by a single polymer mesh size. The shallowness of this requirement dictates that topohesion is rate-limited by the gelation of the stitch network, not by the diffusion of the stitch polymers into the adherend networks. We illustrate this concept using two pieces of polyacrylamide hydrogels as adherends, an aqueous solution of cellulose as stitch polymers, and a change in the pH in the cellulose solution as a trigger. By varying the thickness of the cellulose solution, the time to topohere is tunable from seconds to hours. For a solution of thickness of 50 microns adhesion energy of 50 Jm−2 is attained in 60 s. These experimental findings dispel the myth, and shed light on the times to topohere reported in the literature. The art and science of topohesion provide fertile grounds for fundamental discovery and practical invention to enable unusual applications.
KW - Adhesion
KW - Hydrogel
KW - Kinetics
KW - Topohesion
KW - Topological entanglement
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85086437811
U2 - 10.1016/j.eml.2020.100803
DO - 10.1016/j.eml.2020.100803
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85086437811
SN - 2352-4316
VL - 39
JO - Extreme Mechanics Letters
JF - Extreme Mechanics Letters
M1 - 100803
ER -