Metals & polymers in the mix: fine-tuning the mechanical properties & color of self-healing mussel-inspired hydrogels†
Abstract
Reversible sacrificial bonds play a crucial role in various biological materials where they serve as load-bearing bonds, facilitating extensibility and/or impart self-healing properties to the biological materials. Recently, the coordination bonds found in blue mussel byssal threads have been mimicked in the design of self-healing hydrogels. Herein we show how the mechanical moduli of mussel-inspired hydrogels based on DOPA–polyallylamine (DOPA–PAA) can be straight-forwardly adjusted by systematically varying the coordinating metal from AlIII, GaIII to InIII. These gels are transparent and only slightly tanned opposite to the black hydrogels obtained using FeIII. Additionally, dark FeIII:DOPA–chitosan gels were synthesized and showed remarkably high storage modulus. The strongest hydrogels were formed around pH 8, which is closer to physiological pH than what was observed in the FeIII:DOPA–PAA system (pHmax ∼ 9.5). This finding supports the hypothesis that the maximum in the storage modulus distribution can be adjusted to match a given application by selecting the cationic polymer based on its pKa value.
- This article is part of the themed collection: 2014 Journal of Materials Chemistry B Hot Articles