Department of Chemistry and Biotechnology, School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-8656, Japan
ERATO-SORST Nanospace Project, Japan Science and Technology Agency, National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation, 2-41 Aomi, Koto-ku, Tokyo 135-0064, Japan
Nanotechnology Research Institute, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, 1-1-1 Higashi, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8565, Japan
Center for Supramolecular Nano-Assembly and Department of Chemistry, Seoul National University, 599 Kwanak-ro, Seoul 151-747, Korea
Correspondence to: Justin L. Mynar1,2Takuzo Aida1,2 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to T.A. (Email: aida@macro.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp) or J.L.M. (Email: jmynar@berkeley.edu).
With the world’s focus on reducing our dependency on fossil-fuel energy, the scientific community can investigate new plastic materials that are much less dependent on petroleum than are conventional plastics. Given increasing environmental issues, the idea of replacing plastics with water-based gels, so-called hydrogels, seems reasonable. Here we report that water and clay (2–3per cent by mass), when mixed with a very small proportion (<0.4per cent by mass) of organic components, quickly form a transparent hydrogel. This material can be moulded into shape-persistent, free-standing objects owing to its exceptionally great mechanical strength, and rapidly and completely self-heals when damaged. Furthermore, it preserves biologically active proteins for catalysis. So far1 no other hydrogels, including conventional ones formed by mixing polymeric cations and anions2, 3 or polysaccharides and borax4, have been reported to possess all these features. Notably, this material is formed only by non-covalent forces resulting from the specific design of a telechelic dendritic macromolecule with multiple adhesive termini for binding to clay.
Hydrogel self-heals in seconds
20 January 2010
Japanese researchers have created a rapidly self-healing hydrogel material, composed largely of water, which they say could have applications in regenerative medicine and green chemistry.
The new material is remarkably tough compared to other hydrogels of the same kind - non-covalent hydrogels - which have until now been regarded as fairly weak. Lead researcher Takuzo Aida, based at the University of Tokyo, compares it to silicone rubber in terms of strength. Perhaps most impressive, though, is that if the gel is cut with a razor, it immediately sticks itself back together, healing in around three seconds.
Equally remarkable is the ease with which the gel can be made. At 98 per cent water, it contains small amounts of just three other components: sodium polyacrylate, a branched molecule dubbed 'G3-binder', which is covered in guanidinium ions, and clay, in the shape of nanosheets. These are simply mixed together to make the gel, which forms in seconds. 'Anyone - even my wife - can prepare our material by just mixing the necessary components in water at room temperature,' says Aida.
Cryogenic transmission electron microscopy images of the regularly dispersed clay nanosheets within the hydrogel
The binder molecules give the gel its self-healing properties by cross-linking the clay nanosheets. The positively charged guanidinium ions stick resolutely to negatively charged oxyanions on the surface of the clay. Cutting the gel rips these apart, Aida explains, but if the freshly cut surfaces are pushed against each other straight away, the reverse process occurs and the oppositely charged ions stick back together.
As Alain Domard, a hydrogels expert at University Claude Bernard Lyon 1 in France, points out, however, the gel's self-healing properties are limited. 'It requires the use of fresh cuts,' he says. 'This signifies that the mechanism is kinetically limited and the material reconstituted from the cuts cannot be compared to an original gel with the same global shape.' He adds that deeper studies of the molecular mechanisms of gel formation are required in the future.
For Aida, it's a triumph that the material heals at all - there are no other covalent hydrogels with comparable mechanical properties that can do this, he says. But it's the combination of self-healing, strength, ease of preparation and potential applications that, according to Aida, makes it truly unique. He says the material could be used to support enzymes and catalysts for organic synthesis, or as a component of regenerative medicine and artificial cartilage. 'It could be prepared on-site by medical doctors for surgical operation,' he says.
But Domard says the gels need to be made cheaper and more environmentally friendly before they can be considered for widespread use. 'To my knowledge, polyacrylic and [the team's binder] structures are still produced from oil,' he notes.
Hayley Birch
Interesting? Spread the word using the 'tools' menu on the left.
References
Q Wang et al, Nature, 2010, DOI: 10.1038/nature08693