3 research outputs found

    Nonionic Double and Triple Network Hydrogels of High Mechanical Strength

    No full text
    Among the hydrogels prepared in recent years, double network (DN) hydrogels exhibit the highest compression strength, toughness, and fracture energies. However, synthesis of DN hydrogels with extraordinary mechanical properties is limited to polyelectrolyte networks, which hinders their widespread applications. Herein, we prepared nonionic DN and triple network (TN) hydrogels based on polyacrylamide (PAAm) and poly­(<i>N,N</i>-dimethylacrylamide) (PDMA) with a high mechanical strength by sequential polymerization reactions. The TN approach is based on the decrease of the translational entropy of the second monomer upon its polymerization in the first network, so that additional solvent (third monomer) can enter into DN hydrogel to assume its new thermodynamic equilibrium. The first network of TN hydrogels comprises chemically cross-linked PAAm or PDMA while the second and third networks are linear polymers. To increase the degree of inhomogeneity of the first network hydrogel, an oligomeric ethylene glycol dimethacrylate was used as a cross-linker in the gel preparation. Depending on the concentration of the first network cross-linker and on the molar ratio of the second and third to the first network units, TN hydrogels contain 89–92% water and exhibit high compressive fracture stresses (up to 19 MPa) and compressive moduli (up to 1.9 MPa)

    Dynamics and Large Strain Behavior of Self-Healing Hydrogels with and without Surfactants

    No full text
    Polyacrylamide hydrogels formed via hydrophobic interactions between stearyl groups in aqueous micellar solution of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) present two faces depending on which state they are. The gels containing SDS micelles exhibit, in addition to the fast mode, a slow relaxation mode in dynamic light scattering (DLS) and time-dependent elastic moduli, indicating the temporary nature of the hydrophobic associations having lifetimes of the order of seconds to milliseconds. The gels where SDS had been removed after their preparation behave similar to chemically cross-linked ones with time-independent elastic moduli, a high degree of spatial inhomogeneity, and a single relaxation mode in DLS. Because of this drastic structural change, the physical gels are insoluble in water with a gel fraction close to unity. In surfactant containing gels, a large proportion of physical cross-links dissociate under force, but they do so reversibly, if the force is removed they reform again. The reversible disengagements of the hydrophobic units building the physical cross-links leads to a self-healing efficiency of nearly 100%, while no such healing behavior was observed after extraction of SDS due to the loss of the reversible nature of the cross-linkages

    Dynamics and Large Strain Behavior of Self-Healing Hydrogels with and without Surfactants

    No full text
    Polyacrylamide hydrogels formed via hydrophobic interactions between stearyl groups in aqueous micellar solution of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) present two faces depending on which state they are. The gels containing SDS micelles exhibit, in addition to the fast mode, a slow relaxation mode in dynamic light scattering (DLS) and time-dependent elastic moduli, indicating the temporary nature of the hydrophobic associations having lifetimes of the order of seconds to milliseconds. The gels where SDS had been removed after their preparation behave similar to chemically cross-linked ones with time-independent elastic moduli, a high degree of spatial inhomogeneity, and a single relaxation mode in DLS. Because of this drastic structural change, the physical gels are insoluble in water with a gel fraction close to unity. In surfactant containing gels, a large proportion of physical cross-links dissociate under force, but they do so reversibly, if the force is removed they reform again. The reversible disengagements of the hydrophobic units building the physical cross-links leads to a self-healing efficiency of nearly 100%, while no such healing behavior was observed after extraction of SDS due to the loss of the reversible nature of the cross-linkages
    corecore