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1.
Langmuir ; 37(28): 8410-8416, 2021 07 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34213347

RESUMO

Strong, reversible, and self-cleaning adhesion in the toe pads of geckos allow the lizards to climb on a variety of vertical and inverted surfaces, regardless of the surface conditions, whether hydrophobic or hydrophilic, smooth or tough, wet or dry, clean or dirty. Development of synthetic gecko-inspired surfaces has drawn a great attention over the past two decades. Despite many external-stimuli responsive mechanisms (i.e., thermal, electrical, magnetic) have been successfully demonstrated, smart adhesives controlled by light signals still substantially lag behind. Here, in this report, we integrate tetramethylpiperidinyloxyl (TEMPO)-doped polydopamine (PDA), namely, TDPDA, with PDMS micropillars using a template-assisted casting method, to achieve both improved adhesion and self-cleaning performances. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report on PDA being used as a doping nanoparticle in bioinspired adhesive surfaces to achieve highly efficient self-cleaning controllable by light signals. Notably, the adhesion of the 5% TDPDA-PDMS sample is ∼688.75% higher than that of the pure PDMS at the individual pillar level, which helps to explain the highly efficient self-cleaning mechanism. The sample surfaces (named TDPDA-PDMS) can efficiently absorb 808 nm wavelength of light and heat up from 25 °C to 80.9 °C in 3 min with NIR irradiation. The temperature rise causes significant reduction of adhesion, which results in outstanding self-cleaning rate of up to 55.8% within five steps. The exploration of the photoenabled switching mechanism with outstanding sensitivity may bring the biomimetic smart surfaces into a new dimension, rendering varied applications, e.g., in miniaturized climbing robot, artificial intelligence programmable manipulation/assembly/filtration, active self-cleaning solar panels, including high output sensors and devices in many engineering and biomedical frontiers.


Assuntos
Inteligência Artificial , Lagartos , Adesividade , Adesivos , Animais , Biomimética
2.
iScience ; 23(11): 101749, 2020 Nov 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33241197

RESUMO

Nature does nothing in vain. Through millions of years of revolution, living organisms have evolved hierarchical and anisotropic structures to maximize their survival in complex and dynamic environments. Many of these structures are intrinsically heterogeneous and often with functional gradient distributions. Understanding the convergent and divergent gradient designs in the natural material systems may lead to a new paradigm shift in the development of next-generation high-performance bio-/nano-materials and devices that are critically needed in energy, environmental remediation, and biomedical fields. Herein, we review the basic design principles and highlight some of the prominent examples of gradient biological materials/structures discovered over the past few decades. Interestingly, despite the anisotropic features in one direction (i.e., in terms of gradient compositions and properties), these natural structures retain certain levels of symmetry, including point symmetry, axial symmetry, mirror symmetry, and 3D symmetry. We further demonstrate the state-of-the-art fabrication techniques and procedures in making the biomimetic counterparts. Some prototypes showcase optimized properties surpassing those seen in the biological model systems. Finally, we summarize the latest applications of these synthetic functional gradient materials and structures in robotics, biomedical, energy, and environmental fields, along with their future perspectives. This review may stimulate scientists, engineers, and inventors to explore this emerging and disruptive research methodology and endeavors.

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