Spontaneously Self-healing Polymers
Overcoming a fundamental dilemma in making polymers that combine strength and toughness with spontaneous healing capability.
The Science
A breakthrough has been achieved in designing strong, tough polymeric materials able to spontaneously repair themselves, a key feature of biological systems, without any external help from light, heat, or healing agents.
The Impact
This research overcame a fundamental challenge in the design and synthesis of robust, spontaneously self-healing polymers. The development of polymers that can spontaneously repair themselves after mechanical damage would significantly improve the safety, lifetime, energy efficiency and environmental impact of man-made materials.
Summary
A breakthrough has been achieved in designing mechanically robust polymeric materials that can spontaneously repair themselves, a key feature of biological systems, without any external help from light, heat, or healing agents. Despite significant previous efforts, progress towards the realization of spontaneously self-healing polymers has been hampered by a fundamental dilemma: the need to retain mechanical stiffness/strength while allowing the rapid material dynamics required for spontaneous healing. In research at the University of California, Irvine, this challenge has been addressed by designing and synthesizing a polymer that self-assembles into a nanostructured material incorporating both “hard” and “soft” phases. While the hard phase imparts mechanical toughness, the soft phase, comprising polymer segments with a network of hydrogen bonds, provides dynamic, self-healing capability. Under mechanical stress, connections between polymer chains within the soft phase can rupture but can readily reconnect through hydrogen bonding interactions, thereby effectively mending the damage. The development of polymers that can spontaneously repair themselves after mechanical damage would significantly improve the safety, lifetime, energy efficiency and environmental impact of many man-made materials. A patent application has been filed and a small start-up company has been formed with the goal of commercializing this technology.
Contact
Zhibin Guan
UC Irvine
[email protected]
Funding
Basic Research: DOE, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences program (synthesis, mechanical and self-healing characterization); corporate gifts and University of California, Irvine (structural characterization); National Science Foundation MRSEC (SAXS).
Publications
Y. Chen, A. M. Kushner, G. A. Williams, and Z. Guan, Multiphase design of autonomic self-healing thermoplastic elastomers, 2012,Nature Chemistry, 4, 467-472. http://www.nature.com/nchem/journal/v4/n6/full/nchem.1314.html
Related Links
http://cen.acs.org/articles/90/i14/Polymer-Heal-Thyself.html
http://www.nature.com.proxy.osti.gov/nchem/journal/v4/n6/full/nchem.1357.html
Highlight Categories
Performer: University
Additional: Technology Impact , Collaborations , Non-DOE Interagency Collaboration