Author
Listed:
- Shaoning Zhang
(Shanghai Jiao Tong University
ShanghaiTech University
Chinese Academy of Sciences)
- Dayong Ren
(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
- Qiaoyu Zhao
(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
- Min Peng
(ShanghaiTech University)
- Xia Wang
(ShanghaiTech University)
- Zhitao Zhang
(Shanghai Jiao Tong University)
- Wei Liu
(ShanghaiTech University)
- Fuqiang Huang
(Shanghai Jiao Tong University)
Abstract
Physical hydrogels, three-dimensional polymer networks with reversible cross-linking, have been widely used in many developments throughout the history of mankind. However, physical hydrogels face significant challenges in applications due to wound rupture and low elasticity. Some self-heal wounds with strong ionic bond throughout the network but struggle to immediately recover during cyclic operation. In light of this, a strategy that achieves both self-healing and elasticity has been developed through the construction of topological hydrogen-bonding domains. These domains are formed by entangled button-knot nanoscale colloids of polyacrylic-acid (PAA) with an ultra-high molecular weight up to 240,000, further guiding the polymerization of polyacrylamide to reinforce the hydrogel network. The key for such colloids is the self-assembly of PAA fibers, approximately 4 nm in diameter, and the interconnecting PAA colloids possess high strength, simultaneously acting as elastic scaffold and reversibly cross-linking near wounds. The hydrogel completely recovers mechanical properties within 5 h at room temperature and consistently maintains >85% toughness in cyclic loading. After swelling, the hydrogel has 96.1 wt% of water content and zero residual strain during cycling. Such physical hydrogel not only provides a model system for the microstructural engineering of hydrogels but also broadens the scope of potential applications.
Suggested Citation
Shaoning Zhang & Dayong Ren & Qiaoyu Zhao & Min Peng & Xia Wang & Zhitao Zhang & Wei Liu & Fuqiang Huang, 2025.
"Observation of topological hydrogen-bonding domains in physical hydrogel for excellent self-healing and elasticity,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-11, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-57692-y
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-57692-y
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