Hydrogels
are the focus of extensive research interests due to
their potential application in the fields of biomedical materials,
biosensors, agriculture, and cosmetics. Natural polysaccharide is
one of the good candidates of these hydrogels. However, weak mechanical
properties of cellulose hydrogels greatly limit their practical application.
Here, chemically dual-cross-linked cellulose hydrogels (DCHs) were
constructed by sequential reaction of cellulose with low- and high-molecular-weight
cross-linkers to obtain relatively short chains and long chains cross-linked
networks. Both the distribution and density of the cross-linking domains
in the hydrogel networks were monitored by three-dimensional Raman
microscopic imaging technique. Interestingly, the ruptured stress
of DCHs in tensile and compressive tests were 1.7 and 9.4 MPa, which
were 26.3- and 83.9-fold larger than those of chemically single-cross-linked
cellulose hydrogel. The reinforcement mechanism of DCH was proposed,
as the breaking of the short-chain cross-linking in the networks effectively
dissipated mechanical energy, and the extensibility of the relatively
long-chain cross-linking maintained the elasticity of DCH. Therefore,
both the strength and toughness of DCH was enhanced, and the dual
networks consisting of short-chain and long-chain cross-linking played
an important role in the improvement of the mechanical properties
of the cellulose hydrogels. The application prospect of the robust
cellulose hydrogels with bimodal network structure would be greatly
broadened in the sustainable biopolymer fields