Body Heat Makes Polymers Move, Do Tricks


“Tuning the trigger temperature is only one part of the story,” says Mitch Anthamatten, a chemical engineering professor at the University of Rochester. “We also engineered these materials to store large amount of elastic energy, enabling them to perform more mechanical work during their shape recovery.”

The key to developing the new polymer was figuring out how to control crystallization that occurs when the material is cooled or stretched. As the material is deformed, polymer chains are locally stretched, and small segments of the polymer align in the same direction in small areas—or domains—called crystallites, which fix the material into a temporarily deformed shape.

As the number of crystallites grows, the polymer shape becomes more and more stable, making it increasingly difficult for the material to revert back to its initial—or “permanent”—shape.

The ability to tune the trigger temperature was achieved by including molecular linkers to connect the individual polymer strands. Anthamatten’s group discovered that linkers inhibit—but don’t stop—crystallization when the material is stretched. By altering the number and types of linkers used, as well as how they’re distributed throughout the polymer network, the researchers were able to adjust the material’s stability and precisely set the melting point at which the shape change is triggered.

Heating the new polymer to temperatures near 35 °C, just below the body temperature causes the crystallites to break apart and the material to revert to its permanent shape.

“Our shape-memory polymer is like a rubber band that can lock itself into a new shape when stretched,” says Anthamatten. “But a simple touch causes it to recoil back to its original shape.”

Lifts 1,000 times its weight

Having a polymer with a precisely tunable trigger temperature was only one objective. Of equal importance, Anthamatten and his team wanted the material to be able to deliver a great deal of mechanical work as the shape transforms back to its permanent shape. Consequently, they set out to optimize their polymer networks to store as much elastic energy as possible.

“Nearly all applications of shape memory polymers will require that the material pushes or pulls on its surroundings,” says Anthamatten. “However, researchers seldom measure the amount of mechanical work that shape-memory polymers are actually performing.”

Anthamatten’s shape-memory polymer is capable of lifting an object 1,000 times its weight. For example, a polymer the size of a shoelace—which weighs about a gram—could lift a liter of soda.

Anthamatten says the shape-memory polymer could have a variety of applications, including sutures, artificial skin, body-heat assisted medical dispensers, and self-fitting apparel.

 

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Source: University of RochesterPosted by  for University of Rochester, CC by 4.0

 

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