4.8 Article

Secondary Nucleation-Triggered Physical Cross-Links and Tunable Stiffness in Seeded Supramolecular Hydrogels

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 144, Issue 25, Pages 11306-11315

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c03230

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swarna Jayanti Fellowship award [DST/SJF/CSA01/2016-2017]
  2. Department of Biotechnology, Government of India [BT/IN/Swiss/55/SJG/2018-2019]
  3. JC Bose Fellowship from SERB [SR/S2/JCB-68/2007]
  4. UGC
  5. IISc

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This article explores a molecular control method for the fibrous network topology and macroscopic properties of supramolecular hydrogels. By introducing the surface-catalyzed secondary nucleation process, a non-covalent strategy is utilized to induce physical cross-links and bundling of supramolecular fibers, thereby influencing the microstructure and mechanical properties of the gel networks.
Mechanistic understanding and the control of molecular self-assembly at all hierarchical levels remain grand challenges in supramolecular chemistry. Functional realization of dynamic supramolecular materials especially requires programmed assembly at higher levels of molecular organization. Herein, we report an unprecedented molecular control on the fibrous network topology of supramolecular hydrogels and their resulting macroscopic properties by biasing assembly pathways of higher-order structures. The surface-catalyzed secondary nucleation process, a well-known mechanism in amyloid fibrilization and chiral crystallization of small molecules, is introduced as a non-covalent strategy to induce physical cross-links and bundling of supramolecular fibers, which influences the microstructure of gel networks and subsequent mechanical properties of hydrogels. In addition, seed-induced instantaneous gelation is realized in the kinetically controlled self-assembled system under this study, and more importantly, the extent of secondary nucleation events and network topology is manipulated by the concentration of seeds.

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