Vignesh Subramaniam , Abhishek M. Shetty , Steven J. Chisolm , Taylor R. Lansberry , Anjana Balachandar , Cameron D. Morley , Thomas E. Angelini
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Biomaterials that can be reversibly stiffened and shaped could be useful in broad biomedical applications where form-fitting scaffolds are needed. Here we investigate the combination of strong non-linear elasticity in biopolymer networks with the reconfigurability of packed hydrogel particles within a composite biomaterial. By packing microgels into collagen-1 networks and characterizing their linear and non-linear material properties, we empirically determine a scaling relationship that describes the synergistic dependence of the material's linear elastic shear modulus on the concentration of both components. We perform high-strain rheological tests and find that the materials strain stiffen and also exhibit a form of programmability, where no applied stress is required to maintain stiffened states of deformation after large strains are applied. We demonstrate that this non-linear rheological behavior can be used to shape samples that do not spontaneously relax large-scale bends, holding their deformed shapes for days. Detailed analysis of the frequency-dependent rheology reveals an unexpected connection to the rheology of living cells, where models of soft glasses capture their low-frequency behaviors and polymer elasticity models capture their high-frequency behaviors.
期刊介绍:
Giant is an interdisciplinary title focusing on fundamental and applied macromolecular science spanning all chemistry, physics, biology, and materials aspects of the field in the broadest sense. Key areas covered include macromolecular chemistry, supramolecular assembly, multiscale and multifunctional materials, organic-inorganic hybrid materials, biophysics, biomimetics and surface science. Core topics range from developments in synthesis, characterisation and assembly towards creating uniformly sized precision macromolecules with tailored properties, to the design and assembly of nanostructured materials in multiple dimensions, and further to the study of smart or living designer materials with tuneable multiscale properties.