1 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Reversible Thermosensitive Biodegradable Polymeric Actuators Based on Confined Crystallization
We
discovered a new and unexpected effect of reversible actuation of
ultrathin semicrystalline polymer films. The principle was demonstrated
on the example of thin polycaprolactone-gelatin bilayer films. These
films are unfolded at room temperature, fold at temperature above
polycaprolactone melting point, and unfold again at room temperature.
The actuation is based on reversible switching of the structure of
the hydrophobic polymer (polycaprolactone) upon melting and crystallization.
We hypothesize that the origin of this unexpected behavior is the
orientation of polycaprolactone chains parallel to the surface of
the film, which is retained even after melting and crystallization
of the polymer or the “crystallization memory effect”.
In this way, the crystallization generates a directed force, which
causes bending of the film. We used this effect for the design of
new generation of fully biodegradable thermoresponsive polymeric actuators,
which are highly desirable for bionano-technological applications
such as reversible encapsulation of cells and design of swimmers