4.8 Article

Activation of Actuating Hydrogels with WS2 Nanosheets for Biomimetic Cellular Structures and Steerable Prompt Deformation

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 9, Issue 37, Pages 32280-32289

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.7b10348

Keywords

biomimetics; actuating hydrogel; cellular structure; transition-metal dichalcogenide; prompt deformation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21474125, 51608509]
  2. Chinese 1000 Youth Talent Program
  3. National Key Technology R&D Program of the Ministry of Science and Technology [201SBAD14B06]
  4. Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2016M590670]
  5. Shandong Taishan Youth Scholoar Program
  6. Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation [JQ201609, ZR2016EEB25]
  7. Shandong Collaborative Innovation Centre for marine biomass fibre materials and textiles

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Macroscopic soft actuation is intrinsic to living organisms in nature, including slow deformation (e.g., contraction, bending, twisting, and curling) of plants motivated by microscopic swelling and shrinking of cells, and rapid motion of animals (e.g., deformation of jellyfish) motivated by cooperative nanoscale movement of motor proteins. These actuation behaviors, with an exceptional combination of tunable speed and programmable deformation direction, inspire us to design artificial soft actuators for broad applications in artificial muscles, nanofabrication, chemical valves, microlenses, soft robotics, etc. However, so far artificial soft actuators have been typically produced on the basis of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNiPAM), whose deformation is motived by volumetric shrinkage and swelling in analogue to plant cells, and exhibits sluggish actuation kinetics. In this study, alginate-exfoliated WS2 nanosheets were incorporated into ice-template-polymerized PNiPAM hydrogels with the cellular microstructures which mimic plant cells, yet the prompt steerable actuation of animals. Because of the nanosheet-reinforced pore walls formed in situ in freezing polymerization and reasonable hierarchical water channels, this cellular hybrid hydrogel achieves super deformation speed (on the order of magnitude of 10 degrees s), controllable deformation direction, and high near-infrared light responsiveness, offering an unprecedented platform of artificial muscles for various soft robotics and devices (e.g., rotator, microvalve, aquatic swimmer, and water-lifting filter).

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