4.8 Article

An Antifreezing/Antiheating Hydrogel Containing Catechol Derivative Urushiol for Strong Wet Adhesion to Various Substrates

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 12, Issue 28, Pages 32031-32040

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c09917

Keywords

hydrogel; antifreezing; antiheating; wet adhesion

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Fujian Province [2019J05059]
  2. Fujian Provincial Health Education Joint Research Project [WKJ2016-2-29]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of China [51773038]
  4. Scientific Research Innovation Team Construction Program of Fujian Normal University [IRTL1702]

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Tough adhesive hydrogels that can tightly bond to wet tissue/polymer/ceramic/metal surfaces have great potentials in various fields. However, conventional adhesive hydrogels usually show short-term and nonreversible adhesion ability, as the water component in a hydrogel readily transforms to vapor or ice in response to fluctuation of environment temperature, hindering their applications in extreme conditions such as in freezing Arctic and roasting Africa. For the first time, urushiol (UH), a natural catechol derivative with a long alkyl side chain, is used as a starting material to copolymerize with acrylamide for fabricating adhesive hydrogels, which contain hydrophobic/hydrophilic moieties, antifreezing agent, and adhesive catechol groups. The antifreezer/moisturizer glycerol/water binary solvent dispersed in the hydrogel endows it with antifreezing/antiheating property. The hydrophobic association and pi-pi interaction from UH moieties of the copolymer greatly improve its mechanical strength (tensile stress: similar to 0.12 MPa with strain of similar to 1100%, toughness: similar to 72 kJ/m(3), compression stress: similar to 6.72 MPa at strain of 90%). The hydrogel can strongly adhere to various dry/wet biological/polymeric/ ceramic/metallic substrates at temperatures ranging from -45 to 50 degrees C. Under ambient conditions, its adhesion force to porcine skin, glass, and tinplate may reach up to 160, 425, and 275 N/m, respectively. Even stored at -45 or 50 degrees C for 30 d, the hydrogel still maintains good flexibility and robust adhesion force. It also shows repeatable underwater adhesion to biological tissue, glass, ceramic, plastic, and rubber. This novel antifreezing/antiheating adhesive hydrogel may be applied in extremely cold or hot environments and in underwater conditions.

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