Publication: Biosynthetic self-healing materials for soft machines
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Pena-Francesch, Abdon
Jung, Huihun
Demirel, Melik C.
Publication Date
Language
Type
Embargo Status
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Alternative Title
Abstract
Self-healing materials are indispensable for soft actuators and robots that operate in dynamic and real-world environments, as these machines are vulnerable to mechanical damage. However, current self-healing materials have shortcomings that limit their practical application, such as low healing strength (below a megapascal) and long healing times (hours). Here, we introduce high-strength synthetic proteins that self-heal micro- and macro-scale mechanical damage within a second by local heating. These materials are optimized systematically to improve their hydrogen-bonded nanostructure and network morphology, with programmable healing properties (2-23 MPa strength after 1 s of healing) that surpass by several orders of magnitude those of other natural and synthetic soft materials. Such healing performance creates new opportunities for bioinspired materials design, and addresses current limitations in self-healing materials for soft robotics and personal protective equipment. Protein-based materials for soft robotics that self-heal within a second while maintaining the high strength of the damaged area are reported.
Source
Publisher
Nature Research
Subject
Chemistry, physical, Materials science, multidisciplinary, Physics, applied, Physics, condensed matter
Citation
Has Part
Source
Nature Materials
Book Series Title
Edition
DOI
10.1038/s41563-020-0736-2