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1.
Materials (Basel) ; 15(24)2022 Dec 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36556625

RESUMO

Recently, a self-healing technique capable of repairing cracks in structures has emerged. Among various self-healing technologies, self-healing capsules can be largely classified into two types, depending on the phase of the core material: solid capsules, in which the core material is a powder; and microcapsules, in which the core material is a liquid. Solid capsules and microcapsules have different mechanisms, and their capsule sizes are also distinctly different. This suggests that each has advantages and disadvantages. Most of the studies known to date have utilized single capsules. However, if one uses a mixture of the two types of capsules, it is possible to highlight the strengths of each capsule and compensate for the weaknesses. Therefore, in this study, the first research on complex capsules that mixed solid capsules and microcapsules was attempted. As a result of the experiment, the complex capsule slightly reduced the fluidity of the mortar, but the effect was not significant. Moreover, the complex capsule tended to reduce the compressive strength of the mortar. In particular, it was found that the effect of solid capsules on the reduction in compressive strength among complex capsules was greater than that of microcapsules. Conversely, the healing performance increased when the ratio of solid capsules in the complex capsules was large.

2.
Materials (Basel) ; 15(24)2022 Dec 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36556725

RESUMO

Advancements in material science have led to the development of various self-healing concrete technologies. Among these is the use of microcapsule-based self-healing materials. This study evaluated the effects of self-healing microcapsules on the quality and healing properties of mortar. A silicate-based inorganic material mixture was used as the healing material tested with ordinary Portland cement. Accordingly, the effects of microcapsules (MCs) on the rheological, mechanical, and healing properties of mortar were determined. The mixing of MCs reduced the plastic viscosity and yield stress of the cement composite material owing to the particle properties of the MCs. The reduction was in proportion to the mixing ratio. The evaluation results show that the unit water permeability decreased owing to the healing reaction immediately after crack initiation. The healing rate was more than 95% at 7 days of healing age when more than 3% of MCs was mixed. This study provides a reference for the optimal mixing rate of MCs to achieve an ideal concrete healing rate.

3.
Sci Robot ; 6(53)2021 04 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34043561

RESUMO

Mimicking biological neuromuscular systems' sensory motion requires the unification of sensing and actuation in a singular artificial muscle material, which must not only actuate but also sense their own motions. These functionalities would be of great value for soft robotics that seek to achieve multifunctionality and local sensing capabilities approaching natural organisms. Here, we report a soft somatosensitive actuating material using an electrically conductive and photothermally responsive hydrogel, which combines the functions of piezoresistive strain/pressure sensing and photo/thermal actuation into a single material. Synthesized through an unconventional ice-templated ultraviolet-cryo-polymerization technique, the homogenous tough conductive hydrogel exhibited a densified conducting network and highly porous microstructure, achieving a unique combination of ultrahigh conductivity (36.8 milisiemens per centimeter, 103-fold enhancement) and mechanical robustness, featuring high stretchability (170%), large volume shrinkage (49%), and 30-fold faster response than conventional hydrogels. With the unique compositional homogeneity of the monolithic material, our hydrogels overcame a limitation of conventional physically integrated sensory actuator systems with interface constraints and predefined functions. The two-in-one functional hydrogel demonstrated both exteroception to perceive the environment and proprioception to kinesthetically sense its deformations in real time, while actuating with near-infinite degrees of freedom. We have demonstrated a variety of light-driven locomotion including contraction, bending, shape recognition, object grasping, and transporting with simultaneous self-monitoring. When connected to a control circuit, the muscle-like material achieved closed-loop feedback controlled, reversible step motion. This material design can also be applied to liquid crystal elastomers.


Assuntos
Materiais Biomiméticos , Biomimética , Robótica , Materiais Inteligentes , Resinas Acrílicas , Compostos de Anilina , Animais , Órgãos Artificiais , Condutividade Elétrica , Retroalimentação Sensorial , Hidrogéis , Luz , Fenômenos Mecânicos , Músculos , Octopodiformes/fisiologia , Porosidade , Estudo de Prova de Conceito , Propriocepção , Sensação , Temperatura , Resistência à Tração
4.
Adv Mater ; 32(38): e2002099, 2020 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33617118

RESUMO

Although hexagonal boron nitride (BN) nanostructures have recently received significant attention due to their unique physical and chemical properties, their applications have been limited by a lack of processability and poor film quality. In this study, a versatile method to transfer-print high-quality BN films composed of densely stacked BN nanosheets based on a desolvation-induced adhesion switching (DIAS) mechanism is developed. It is shown that edge functionalization of BN sheets and rational selection of membrane surface energy combined with systematic control of solvation and desolvation status enable extensive tunability of interfacial interactions at BN-BN, BN-membrane, and BN-substrate boundaries. Therefore, without incorporating any additives in the BN film and applying any surface treatment on target substrates, DIAS achieves a near 100% transfer yield of pure BN films on diverse substrates, including substrates containing significant surface irregularities. The printed BNs demonstrate high optical transparency (>90%) and excellent thermal conductivity (>167 W m-1 K-1) for few-micrometer-thick films due to their dense and well-ordered microstructures. In addition to outstanding heat dissipation capability, substantial optical enhancement effects are confirmed for light-emitting, photoluminescent, and photovoltaic devices, demonstrating their remarkable promise for next-generation optoelectronic device platforms.

5.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 11(50): 47468-47475, 2019 Dec 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31741387

RESUMO

Heterogeneous growth in a myriad of biological systems can lead to the formation of distinct morphologies during the maturation processes of different species. We demonstrate that the distinct circumferential buckling observed in pumpkins can be reproduced by a core-shell barrel structure using four-dimensional (4D) printing, taking advantage of digital light processing (DLP)-based three-dimensional (3D) printing and stimulus-responsive hydrogels. The mechanical mismatch between the stiff core and compliant shell results in buckling instability on the surface. The initiation and development of the buckling are governed by the ratio of core/shell radius, the ratio of core/shell swelling ratios, and the mismatch between the core and shell in stiffness. Furthermore, the rigid core not only acts as a source of circumferential confinement but also sets a boundary at the poles of the entire structure. The heterogeneous structures with controllable buckling geometrically and structurally behave much like plants' fruits. This replicates the biological morphologic change and elucidates the general mechanism and dynamics of the complex instability formation of heterogeneous 3D objects.

6.
J Nanosci Nanotechnol ; 19(10): 6473-6480, 2019 Oct 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31026980

RESUMO

A flexible Si complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) integrated circuit (IC) with multi-level interconnects is realized by thinning down and transferring the CMOS IC onto a polymer substrate. A detailed mechanical and electrical reliability analysis of the flexible Si CMOS IC is carried out in relation to the neutral mechanical plane (NMP) that is extracted from both analytical and numerical modeling. To enhance the reliability by optimizing the NMP position, the thicknesses of all the layers in the CMOS IC on the polymer substrate are carefully adjusted. The NMP-optimized flexible Si CMOS IC maintains its mechanical and electrical stability even at a 5-mm radius bending condition. In addition, to explore the degradation mechanism of the flexible Si CMOS IC, the change of the interface state density of the flexible Si CMOS at different bending conditions is investigated using the charge pumping method. Finally, the long-term electrical reliability of this flexible Si CMOS IC is also investigated.

7.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 5(11): 1801146, 2018 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30479937

RESUMO

Herein, a novel stretchable Cu conductor with excellent conductivity and stretchability is reported via the flash-induced multiscale tuning of Cu and an elastomer interface. Microscale randomly wrinkled Cu (amplitude of ≈5 µm and wavelength of ≈45 µm) is formed on a polymer substrate through a single pulse of a millisecond flash light, enabling the elongation of Cu to exceed 20% regardless of the stretching direction. The nanoscale interlocked interface between the Cu nanoparticles (NPs) and the elastomer increases the adhesion force of Cu, which contributes to a significant improvement of the Cu stability and stretchability under harsh yielding stress. Simultaneously, the flash-induced photoreduction of CuO NPs and subsequent Cu NP welding lead to outstanding conductivity (≈37 kS cm-1) of the buckled elastic electrode. The 3D structure of randomly wrinkled Cu is modeled by finite element analysis simulations to show that the flash-activated stretchable Cu conductors can endure strain over 20% in all directions. Finally, the wrinkled Cu is utilized for wireless near-field communication on the skin of human wrist.

8.
Nanoscale ; 10(36): 17410, 2018 09 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30198036

RESUMO

Correction for 'A three-dimensional metal grid mesh as a practical alternative to ITO' by Sungwoo Jang et al., Nanoscale, 2016, 8, 14257-14263.

9.
ACS Nano ; 11(11): 11642-11652, 2017 11 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29131582

RESUMO

The fabrication of a highly ordered array of single-crystalline nanostructures prepared from solution-phase or vapor-phase synthesis methods is extremely challenging due to multiple difficulties of spatial arrangement and control of crystallographic orientation. Herein, we introduce a nanotransplantation printing (NTPP) technique for the reliable fabrication, transfer, and arrangement of single-crystalline Si nanowires (NWs) on diverse substrates. NTPP entails (1) formation of nanoscale etch mask patterns on conventional low-cost Si via nanotransfer printing, (2) two-step combinatorial plasma etching for defining Si NWs, and (3) detachment and transfer of the NWs onto various receiver substrates using an infiltration-type polymeric transfer medium and a solvent-assisted adhesion switching mechanism. Using this approach, high-quality, highly ordered Si NWs can be formed on almost any type of surface including flexible plastic substrates, biological surfaces, and deep-trench structures. Moreover, NTPP provides controllability of the crystallographic orientation of NWs, which is confirmed by the successful generation of (100)- and (110)-oriented Si NWs with different properties. The outstanding electrical properties of the NWs were confirmed by fabricating and characterizing Schottky junction field-effect transistors. Furthermore, exploiting the highly flexible nature of the NWs, a high-performance piezoresistive strain sensor, with a high gauge factor over 200 was realized.

10.
Nanoscale ; 8(29): 14257-63, 2016 08 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27404907

RESUMO

The development of a practical alternative to indium tin oxide (ITO) is one of the most important issues in flexible optoelectronics. In spite of recent progress in this field, existing approaches to prepare transparent electrodes do not satisfy all of their essential requirements. Here, we present a new substrate-embedded tall (∼350 nm) and thin (∼30 nm) three-dimensional (3D) metal grid mesh structure with a large area, which is prepared via secondary sputtering. This structure satisfies most of the essential requirements of transparent electrodes for practical applications in future opto-electronics: excellent optoelectronic performance (a sheet resistance of 9.8 Ω□(-1) with a transmittance of 85.2%), high stretchability (no significant change in resistance for applied strains <15%), a sub-micrometer mesh period, a flat surface (a root mean square roughness of approximately 5 nm), no haze (approximately 0.5%), and strong adhesion to polymer substrates (it survives attempted detachment with 3M Scotch tape). Such outstanding properties are attributed to the unique substrate-embedded 3D structure of the electrode, which can be obtained with a high aspect ratio and in high resolution over large areas with a simple process. As a demonstration of its suitability for practical applications, our transparent electrode was successfully tested in a flexible touch screen panel. We believe that our approach opens up new practical applications in wearable electronics.

11.
Soft Matter ; 12(18): 4135-41, 2016 05 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27067252

RESUMO

The prediction of hygroscopic swelling of flexible polymer substrates is crucial in various fields from smart structures to flexible electronics. In this study, the prediction method for time-dependent hygroscopic deformation is presented by employing the finite element method (FEM). In order to precisely consider the strain gradients inside the substrate, moisture distribution depending on time is quantitatively investigated by a moisture absorption analysis and sequentially combined with a mechanical deformation analysis. The essential hygroscopic properties including the saturated moisture content, moisture diffusivity, and the coefficient of moisture expansion are precisely measured. Through the application of these hygroscopic properties to a hygro-mechanical analysis model, the moisture distribution and the hygroscopic deformation are quantitatively simulated with time. For the verification of this model, the simulation results of bilayer structures are compared with the experimental results, which are measured using a three-dimensional deformation measurement system. The presented model demonstrates that the global and local hygroscopic deformations are accurately predicted by this approach, showing above 90% averaged accuracy at each time step. These results can be obtained by precisely measured hygroscopic properties and the consideration of the effect of non-uniform distribution on the hygroscopic deformation.

12.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 8(13): 8782-8, 2016 Apr 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26974225

RESUMO

Here, we demonstrate a simple method to systematically control the responsive self-bending behavior of Janus hydrogel microstrips consisting of a polymeric bilayer with a high modulus contrast. The Janus hydrogel microstrips could be easily fabricated by a simple micromolding technique combined with an initiated chemical vapor deposition (iCVD) coating, providing high flexibility in controlling the physical and chemical properties of the microstrips. The fabricated Janus hydrogel microstrip is composed of a soft, pH-responsive polymer hydrogel layer laminated with a highly cross-linked, rigid thin film, generating a geometric anisotropy at a micron scale. The large difference in the elastic moduli between the two layers of the Janus microstrips leads to a self-bending behavior in response to the pH change. More specifically, the impact of the physical and chemical properties of the microstrip on the self-bending phenomena was systematically investigated by changing the thickness and composition of two layers of the microstrip, which renders high controllability in bending of the microstrips. The curvature of the Janus microstrips, formed by self-bending, highly depends on the applied acidity. A reversible, responsive self-bending/unbending exhibits a perfect resilience pattern with repeated changes in pH for 5 cycles. We envision that the Janus microstrips can be engineered to form complex 3D microstructures applicable to various fields such as soft robotics, scaffolds, and drug delivery. The reliable responsive behaviors obtained from the systematic investigation will provide critical information in bridging the gap between the theoretical mechanical analysis and the chemical properties to achieve micron-scale soft robotics.

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