Shiwanka V.
Wanasinghe‡
a,
Brent
Johnson‡
b,
Rebekah
Revadelo
b,
Grant
Eifert
b,
Allyson
Cox
c,
Joseph
Beckett
e,
Timothy
Osborn
c,
Carl
Thrasher
*d,
Robert
Lowe
*b and
Dominik
Konkolewicz
*a
aDepartment of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056, USA. E-mail: d.konkolewicz@miamioh.edu
bDepartment of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of Dayton, Dayton, OH 45469, USA. E-mail: rlowe1@udayton.edu
cAdditive Manufacturing Technology Development Group, University of Dayton Research Institute, Dayton, OH 45469, USA
dDepartment of Materials Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA. E-mail: cthrash@mit.edu
eDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA
First published on 12th June 2023
Repairable adhesive elastomers are emerging materials employed in compelling applications such as soft robotics, biosensing, tissue regeneration, and wearable electronics. Facilitating adhesion requires strong interactions, while self-healing requires bond dynamicity. This contrast in desired bond characteristics presents a challenge in the design of healable adhesive elastomers. Furthermore, 3D printability of this novel class of materials has received limited attention, restricting the potential design space of as-built geometries. Here, we report a series of 3D-printable elastomeric materials with self-healing ability and adhesive properties. Repairability is obtained using Thiol–Michael dynamic crosslinkers incorporated into the polymer backbone, while adhesion is facilitated with acrylate monomers. Elastomeric materials with excellent elongation up to 2000%, self-healing stress recovery >95%, and strong adhesion with metallic and polymeric surfaces are demonstrated. Complex functional structures are successfully 3D printed using a commercial digital light processing (DLP) printer. Shape-selective lifting of low surface energy poly(tetrafluoroethylene) objects is achieved using soft robotic actuators with interchangeable 3D-printed adhesive end effectors, wherein tailored contour matching leads to increased adhesion and successful lifting capacity. The demonstrated utility of these adhesive elastomers provides unique capabilities to easily program soft robot functionality.
Adhesion mechanisms can often be considered as a function of both molecular and mechanical coupling.1 Molecular coupling is the adhesion between two surfaces in close proximity through intermolecular forces such as dipole–dipole interactions, van der Waals forces, ionic interactions, metallic bonding, or covalent bonding.1 Mechanical coupling, a function of the contact area, is the macroscopic interlocking of two surfaces using an adhesive material sandwiched between the surfaces.1 This coupling is maximized when the adhesive material occupies irregularities, such as holes and peaks, on the interfacial surfaces.14 The mechanisms of polymer adhesion are dependent on surface characteristics, and several factors should be considered when designing an adhesive polymer. Applications that need both cohesive and adhesive forces, such as glue, should maintain a balance between these two forces to avoid high affinity towards one of the surfaces.10 In addition, the moduli of the adhesive and substrate should be optimized to yield a tough material system when adhered. In general, low-modulus adhesives are optimal for soft substrates, while high-modulus adhesives are optimal for hard substrates.9 Ductility is another important parameter for optimizing adhesion, since low ductility can promote crack propagation.4,5 In contrast, highly ductile materials use plastic deformation to disperse mechanical energy and increase toughness.5 However, permanent damage from plastic deformation can reduce cohesive strength and lead to internal shear-driven material failure, especially during cyclic loading.
Self-healing elastomers with embedded damage repair are a novel class of materials that offer the potential for continuous, uninterrupted soft device operation.15 One method for imparting self-healing characteristics into polymers is by incorporating dynamic bonds.16 Developing polymers with both self-healing and adhesive properties is desirable but challenging, since the contrasting properties of bond dynamicity for self-healing and strong interactions for adhesion are required.17 Although several self-healing elastomer adhesives have been reported,2,6,13,17–22 the 3D printability of repairable adhesives has received limited attention.
3D printing is useful for producing custom structures with complex form factors. Several common 3D printing techniques for polymers include stereolithography, selective laser sintering, photo-curable inkjet printing, fused filament fabrication, and direct ink writing.23 However, most of these techniques are limited by slow print speeds, poor scalability, and/or low resolution.24 In contrast, digital light processing (DLP) 3D printing achieves high speed, scale, and resolution by utilizing patterned projected light to cure full layers of resin simultaneously.25 This makes DLP 3D printing ideal for rapid prototyping or manufacturing high-complexity objects such as soft robots.26
Soft robotics is a field concerning adaptable and lightweight robots made with compliant materials.27,28 Soft robots are increasingly being used in textiles, biological applications, and electronics applications.3,27,29 Additionally, self-healing functionality is being included in soft robotic systems as a mechanism for embedded damage repair.24,30 While DLP has been used to 3D print materials for soft robotics, balancing mechanical properties, printability, and responsive functionality (e.g., self-healing, adhesion) remains a challenging task.
In this study, we designed a series of DLP-printable adhesive materials with self-healing ability. Self-healing was obtained using Thiol–Michael dynamic exchange (Fig. 1(b)), which was incorporated into the polymer through a diacrylate crosslinker. 2-Hydroxyethyl acrylate (HEA) and butyl acrylate (BA) were used as the polymer backbone, and Thiol–Michael-based sulfone diacrylate (TMSDA) was used as the dynamic Thiol–Michael crosslinker (Fig. 1(b)). BA was used to improve material tackiness, while 2,2′-(ethylenedioxy)diethanethiol (EDDT) was added to increase compliance and add extra thioether components into the material system.24 Variations in composition were explored to show tunability in mechanical and adhesive properties. 3D printing of complex structures, including pneumatic actuators, with high fidelity was successfully demonstrated. Exploiting this 3D printability, functionality was added to an existing soft robotic actuator by adhering 3D-printed end effectors with tailored geometries. By carefully designing the surface contour of the interchangeable end effector, the hybrid soft robot could selectively lift low surface energy objects.
Fig. 1 (a) Photopolymerization of adhesive acrylate elastomer materials. (b) Reversible Thiol–Michael reaction. |
Variations in these molecules (Table 1) are explored to reveal their relative effect on mechanical and adhesive properties. In all cases, the native materials (without photoblocking additives) are clear and pale yellow and almost colorless.
The ratio of TMSDA:EDDT, in percent hard rubber (phr), was changed from 1:1 to 1:0.75 (Table 1, formulation 5 to 4) to investigate the effect of EDDT on tensile properties. The materials with less EDDT (1:0.75) exhibited stiffer stress–strain profiles, a narrower compliant region, and substantially less plastic-like deformation, culminating in similar ultimate tensile strengths but significantly lower elongations at break (Fig. 2(a), red and blue curves). Control samples without BA were prepared for both systems while keeping the TMSDA:EDDT ratios at 1:0.75 and 1:1 (Table 1, formulations 6 and 7). The control samples for TMSDA:EDDT (1:1) exhibited meaningfully higher ultimate tensile strengths than their BA-containing counterparts (Fig. S4, ESI†), but were observed to be substantially less tacky. Less significant differences in the stress–strain response were observed between control samples of TMSDA:EDDT (1:0.75) and the BA-incorporated samples (Fig. S2, ESI†).
Notably, this heat treatment altered mechanical properties, perhaps by increasing polymer conversion or by the loss of plasticizing species (cf.Fig. 2(a) and (b)). Materials with formulation 5 exhibited >95% recovery of stress and ∼87% recovery of strain as shown in Fig. 2(b). Similarly, self-healing data from formulation 7 controls demonstrated ∼100% recovery of the tensile stress and strain (Fig. S1, ESI†). Self-healing experiments on formulation 4 and formulation 6 with lower EDDT content, displayed in Fig. 2(b) and Fig. S3 (ESI†), showed reduced self-healing efficiency. Formulation 4 gave 50% recovery of stress and ∼80% recovery of strain, and formulation 6 showed ∼25% stress recovery and 30% strain recovery (Fig. S3, ESI†). The superior self-healing with higher EDDT content is expected, as EDDT helps generate shorter chains in the network that improve polymer diffusion and hence facilitate healing. Comparing the self-healing of formulation 5 (Fig. S6 and S7, ESI†) with HEA:BA = 80:20 to formulation 7 (Fig. S14 and S15, ESI†) with HEA:BA = 100:0, both having TMSDA:EDDT = 1:1 phr, both show essentially complete self-healing. This suggests that the shorter, more mobile chains generated with higher EDDT content is more significant for self-healing efficiency than the HEA content.
The adhesive properties of the different material formulations in Table 1 were explored as shown in Fig. 3(a) using printed poly(lactic acid) (PLA) laps. Fig. 3(a) shows both the average, standard deviation, and best-measured shear stress at failure for each formulation. With TMSDA:EDDT (1:0.75), as HEA content increases from HEA:BA (50:50) to (100:0) (formulations 1, 3, 4, 6), there is a general trend of increasing shear strength (Fig. 3(a)). The mean of formulation 6 (HEA:BA = 100:0), however, was slightly lower than that of formulation 4 (HEA:BA = 80:20). These lap shear tests tended to fail adhesively (Table S1, ESI†), indicating the cohesive (internal shear) strength of the material exceeded the adhesive (lap-material adhesion) strength.
Fig. 3 Average shear stress at failure from lap shear testing (a) for different formulations on PLA laps and (b) of formulation 4 (TMSDA:EDDT (1:0.75) with HEA:BA (80:20)) on different laps. |
The superior performance of formulation 4, which contains 80% HEA and 20% BA, and formulation 6, which contains 100% HEA, with both having 0.75 phr EDDT, is likely due to several factors. Higher BA content reduces tensile modulus and strength (Fig. 2(a)). Formulation 4 with 20% BA represents a material with higher tackiness (Fig. 3(a)), and thereby better adhesion to the substrate, without substantial loss of mechanical strength. Additionally, formulation 5 had a higher content of EDDT than formulation 4 (1 phr vs. 0.75), which can induce more plastic-like deformation (Fig. 2(a)), reducing the cohesive strength of the material, leading to internal failure prior to debonding from the laps (Table S1, ESI†).
Overall, materials with a small fraction of BA (20%) adhere better to PLA than those with higher BA content. Additionally, BA (20%) gives slightly improved adhesion to PLA when compared to materials with no BA. Higher EDDT content appears to adversely impact material cohesive strength, leading to cohesive failure at 1 phr EDDT. This suggests that there is a tradeoff between the adhesive characteristics to PLA, which increases with HEA content and reaches a peak near 80% BA, and material cohesive strength, which decreases with EDDT content.
The adhesive strength of formulation 4 against a variety of substrates (laps) is shown in Fig. 3(b). These substrate materials included 303 stainless steel, 6061 aluminum, poly(tetrafluoroethylene) (PTFE), 3D-printed PLA, polystyrene, polypropylene, and polyoxymethylene. Aluminum showed the highest average shear stress at failure, outside of PLA, perhaps due to the higher concentration of metal oxide species on the surface able to participate in hydrogen bonding. Steel had a lower average shear stress at failure, and had a significantly lower variability than aluminum. The tests with aluminum laps exhibited more variability, likely due to inconsistent surface roughness between laps.
The polymeric substrates (PTFE, polystyrene, polypropylene and polyoxymethylene), however, generally exhibited lower shear strengths than the aluminum substrate and typically resulted in adhesive failure (i.e., interfacial adhesion strength was lower than the material's internal shear strength). PLA exhibited notably higher shear strengths, likely due to lap surface roughness from 3D printing enhancing interfacial adhesion. Polypropylene and polyoxymethylene exhibited higher “best values” than the other plastics, but with high variability. It is important to note that good adhesion was observed across the full range of substrates, including low surface energy materials such as PTFE and polyoxymethylene that are typically challenging to adhere to.
Steel was selected as the material for heated binding tests due to its low variability. Materials that were bonded at elevated temperature had ∼7 fold better adhesive properties compared to materials that were bonded at room temperature (displayed in the inset of Fig. 3(b)). All tests after heating resulted in cohesive failure, indicating that the adhesion strength of the steel–elastomer interface exceeded the internal shear strength of the material. This is likely due to (a) the increased modulus of the elastomer after heat treatment and (b) reconfiguration of the dynamic covalent bonds in the TMSDA at 90 °C, enabling a new permanent shape that occupies irregularities in surface topology, thereby leading to superior mechanical coupling and adhesion (Fig. S17, ESI†). This improvement in adhesion is a valuable characteristic for an adhesive elastomer as bonding can be reversible at room temperature to facilitate applications, but permanent and strong with applied heat and pressure.
The adhesive functionality of prints was demonstrated through reconfigurable stick-on “fingertips,” printed with formulation 4, which could selectively lift objects (Fig. 5). A pneumatic actuator printed using the commercial elastomeric resin RUBBER-65A BLK (3D Systems) was developed as a scaffold for shape-selective adhesion. On its own, the actuator had no adhesive properties or the ability to pick up objects. To increase the functionality of the actuator, shape-selective 3D-printed adhesive “fingertips” were adhesively bound to the end of the actuator. These interchangeable end effector “fingertips” were either flat or concave surfaces that could selectively attach to flat or round objects, respectively. The adhesive “fingertips” were either rectangular (2.5 × 2.5 × 0.49 cm) or concave (cylinder of diameter 2.2 cm, height of 0.89 cm, with the concave shape achieved within a spherical geometry of diameter 1.9 cm).
As shown in Fig. 5, selectivity could be achieved using the adhesive “fingertip” modified RUBBER-65A BLK actuator to lift a sphere (PTFE, 8 g, 1.9 cm diameter) or rectangular block (3D-printed PLA, 3 g, 1.9 × 1.9 × 0.64 cm). Different substrate materials were chosen to highlight shape selectivity across different surface energies. When the shape of the adhesive fingertip and the object were compatible with sufficient interfacial contact, the object was successfully lifted by the actuator (Movies 1 and 2, ESI†; Fig. 5(a) and (d)). When the shape of the fingertip and object were incompatible with insufficient interfacial contact, the actuator failed to lift the object (Movies 3 and 4, ESI†; Fig. 5(b) and (c)). In this way, simple functionalization of a generic pneumatic actuator towards shape selectivity can be achieved with easily 3D-printable resins. It is also noteworthy that the functionalized actuator can lift low surface energy materials such as a PTFE sphere or a moderate surface energy PLA block with high selectivity. It is important to note that various debonding mechanisms could be used to release the object. In this case, shear was applied to debond the lifted objects, but careful design of the actuator could be performed in future iterations to have a secondary actuation that changes the contact area, thereby debonding objects. Additionally, in this paper, the curvature of the adhesive finger was carefully matched to the curvature of the object to be lifted. However, it is also possible to design partial mismatch of curvature if selective debonding is targeted.
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d3sm00394a |
‡ Contributed equally. |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023 |