Lorena
Ceamanos
a,
Dirk J.
Mulder
b,
Zehra
Kahveci
a,
María
López-Valdeolivas
a,
Albert P. H. J.
Schenning
bc and
Carlos
Sánchez-Somolinos
*ad
aInstituto de Nanociencia y Materiales de Aragón (INMA), CSIC-Universidad de Zaragoza, Departamento de Física de la Materia Condensada, Zaragoza, 50009, Spain. E-mail: carlos.s@csic.es
bLaboratory of Stimuli-responsive Functional Materials and Devices (SFD), Department of Chemical Engineering and Chemistry, Eindhoven University of Technology, P.O. Box 513, 5600 MB Eindhoven, The Netherlands
cInstitute for Complex Molecular Systems, Eindhoven University of Technology, P.O. Box 513, 5600 MB Eindhoven, The Netherlands
dCentro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Bioingeniería, Biomateriales y Nanomedicina, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, 50018 Zaragoza, Spain
First published on 24th April 2023
Soft and mechanically responsive actuators hold the promise to revolutionize the design and manufacturing of devices in the areas of microfluidics, soft robotics and biomedical engineering. In many of these applications, the actuators need to operate in a wet environment that can strongly affect their performance. In this paper, we report on the photomechanical response in a biological buffer of azobenzene-containing liquid crystal elastomer (LCE)-based actuators, prepared by four-dimensional (4D) printing. Although the photothermal contribution to the photoresponse is largely cancelled by the heat withdrawing capacity of the employed buffer, a significant photoinduced reversible contraction, in the range of 7% of its initial length, has been achieved under load, taking just a few seconds to reach half of the maximum contraction. Effective photomechanical work performance under physiological conditions has, therefore, been demonstrated in the 4D-printed actuators. Advantageously, the photomechanical response is not sensitive to salts present in the buffer differently to hydrogels with responses highly dependent on the fluid composition. Our work highlights the capabilities of photomechanical actuators, created using 4D printing, when operating under physiological conditions, thus showing their potential for application in the microfluidics and biomedical fields.
In this context, hydrogels, undergoing large volume changes due to swelling and deswelling in response to an external stimulus, such as heat, light or chemical, have been explored to implement actuators for these wet environments. However, hydrogels typically have limited mechanical strength and a response, in the order of minutes, that is highly dependent on the chemical components incorporated in the working fluid, these being strong limitations for the use of these materials in many applications.7,8 Liquid crystal networks (LCNs), on the other hand, allow the preparation of dynamic structures capable of adapting their shape in response to different stimuli, performing considerable mechanical work when actuated and displaying significantly faster response times than those reached with hydrogels.9 Besides, LCNs may be actuated in both water and air environments.10 These materials exhibit anisotropic deformation as a result of a change in the molecular order of the constituent mesogens, induced by an external stimulus such as heat, light, pH or an electrical field.11,12 Among these stimuli, light is especially attractive for the above-mentioned applications, as it allows remote actuation of these systems with excellent spatial and temporal control of excitation.1,13–16
Light-responsive LCNs can be synthesized by incorporating azobenzene units into a liquid crystal (LC) polymer network.13,16–19 When exposed to light, macroscopic shape changes have been previously reported for azobenzene containing LCNs operated in air as a result of two main contributions: the photochemical effect and the photothermal effect. On the one hand, the photochemical effect has its origin in the fact that irradiation of azobenzene molecules with light at the absorption peak of the trans isomer (365 nm) leads to isomerization from the elongated trans to the bulky cis isomer, causing a decrease in the molecular order of the network.10,15,20,21 The photothermal contribution, on the other hand, arises from the photon energy absorbed by the chromophore that is transformed into thermal energy, contributing to the order disruption of the LCN.10,22 For both mechanisms, it needs to be considered that light intensity throughout the sample thickness is not uniform, as dictated by the Beer's law, due to the absorption of light at the illuminated side of the sample.11,18,23 As a consequence, when one side of an LCN element with uniaxial oriented molecules is irradiated with ultraviolet (UV) light, this gradient in intensity can cause a bending movement towards the light due to dissimilar photoinduced stresses across the film thickness.3,24–27 Although the deformation behaviour of photoresponsive LC-based actuators has been widely explored in air, relevant information for their integration in real devices, such as the capacity to exert forces and perform mechanical work upon light stimulation, has been addressed only in few occasions and further research is required.9,23,28,29 Besides their use in air, the study of the performance of these materials within fluids is of great relevance for biomedical applications as said above, however, analysis of the deformation achieved upon light-stimulus in other media than air is limited, with the results reported to date being mainly focused on bending deformations generated by relatively low strains underwater.3,10,15,24–27,30,31 Thus, further research to demonstrate the capacity of these materials to accomplish other mechanical functions beyond bending, such as contraction or expansion, when submerged in biologically relevant media, is required. This is especially important considering that actuation of azobenzene containing LC-based elements may be severely affected by the presence of fluids as they dissipate sample heat in a more efficient manner than air, considerably limiting the photothermal contribution to the mechanical response.10
Herein, we report an analysis of the light-induced mechanical actuation of thiol-acrylate-based azobenzene containing liquid crystal elastomers (LCEs), prepared by direct ink writing (DIW), when submerged in a biological buffer. We have chosen DIW as a newly developed relevant fabrication technique of these types of actuators that can make their future integration in devices industrially feasible. This printing technique has demonstrated the manufacturing of LCE-based structures with digitally controlled molecular orientation, defined by the LC direction.26,32–34 Printing of LC macromers leads to mesogen alignment along the printing direction that can be fixed through photopolymerization, leading to the structured LCE.9,32–35 This precise control of the alignment of the printed materials allows programming the response, conferring the structures the ability to change their shape in a controlled manner in response to an external stimulus and leading to the so-called four-dimensional (4D) printing concept which adds time as the 4th dimension.36–38 Although the fast mechanical response of this type of printed actuators has been reported upon photoirradiation in air, resulting in effective mechanical work, the mechanical performance of these direct ink-written actuators beyond bending characterization has not yet been studied in fluids.9
Regarding the fluid, we have chosen phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), a buffer solution, mainly containing water, sodium and potassium salts, that closely mimics ion concentrations, pH and osmolarity found in the human body. Being non-cytotoxic to most types of cells, PBS is a relevant fluid in many biological applications. The exploration of the photomechanical response of LCE-based actuators when submerged in this biological buffer is carried out in this paper. Additional experiments were performed in air and another model fluid to further understand the mechanisms underlying actuation in PBS.
(1) |
Experiments using fluid media were performed in a metallic chamber with two opposing glass slides facing each other to facilitate light excitation and visual observation. A thermocouple, protected from the light beams, was immersed in the fluid for temperature monitoring of the media. Each sample, coupled to a metal weight of 1 g attached to one extreme, was placed inside the chamber after being filled with the corresponding media. When different media temperatures other than RT were required, the chamber was heated using a hot plate. Before starting the stimulation of the sample, the fluid temperature was thus increased and left to stabilize for 30 minutes. Experiments in air were performed in a homebuilt aluminium chamber. The chamber has two opposing cyclic olefin polymer (COP) windows as optical accesses to ensure good visibility of the actuation. A small hole of 5 mm of diameter was perforated in one COP film to allow local thermal monitoring of the surface of the sample using a thermographic camera (Gobi, from Xenics).
During thermoactuation experiments, the sample was heated up to 90 °C at a rate of 1 °C min−1 and subsequently left for cooling to 30 °C to check the reversibility of the actuation. For photoactuation experiments, depending on the specific requirements of each test, one or both sides of the sample were irradiated with UV LEDs (365 nm, 2 minutes of irradiation) first for excitation. Then, the samples were left in the dark for 2 minutes and, subsequently, one or two blue light LEDs (455 nm, 30 minutes of irradiation), depending on the illumination scheme, were used for relaxation. Additionally, light intensity passing through the transparent interfaces of the chambers was measured for air and fluid media before carrying out photoactuation experiments. From these measurements, a 5% additional decrease of the light intensity on the sample's surface was estimated to be introduced by the interfaces involved in the light-triggered experiments in air when compared to the experiments carried out in fluid. We have taken this attenuation into account to compensate for the intensity difference.
Actuation of the samples in fluid and air media was monitored by taking images every 5 °C or extracting images from the video recording acquired using a digital camera Nikon D3300 in thermoactuation and photoactuation experiments, respectively. The length of the actuator (L) was measured from the images by drawing and measuring a straight line along the long axis of the testing area of the sample, between both fixation tape endings. ImageJ free software was employed for the measurements. L0 is defined as the initial length of the active area of the samples (between both fixation tapes at the endings) when coupled to the 1 g weight, for each experiment. In thermoactuation, length values at each temperature (L) were normalized by the initial length (L0) while at 30 °C. On the other hand, length values (L) were normalized by the initial length (L0) before UV light irradiation at RT or 37 °C, depending on the specific conditions of each one of the light-triggered experiments. Fractional contraction (C) is defined as (L0 − L)/L0.17 For photoactuation experiments, fractional contraction (C) has been normalized to the maximum fractional contraction (Cmax) achieved during UV light irradiation.
LCE-based actuators with a dog-bone geometry were generated by DIW describing adjacent lines of ink parallel to the long direction of the stripe (Fig. 1b). Continuous samples, homogeneous in thickness, were achieved after the optimization of some relevant printing conditions such as needle diameter (0.33 mm), speed (0.8 mm s−1), print head pressure (7 bars), as well as print head and substrate temperature (80 and 25 °C, respectively). Polarization optical microscopy (POM) images of these samples, observed with the printing direction at 0° and 45° with respect to the transmission direction of the first polarizer, showed a birefringent texture of the deposited material right after printing (Fig. 1c). These observations, with light extinction at 0° and light transmission at 45°, are compatible with a mesogenic orientation parallel to the printing direction, the long direction of the actuator, as previously described in the literature.9,26,32–34 This orientation could be induced during the extrusion process through the shear forces applied in the needle and/or the elongational flow during the deposition of the material.32 Then, the printed samples were photopolymerized following the curing protocol described in the experimental section to fix the induced molecular alignment, maintaining the same preferential uniaxial orientation direction after curing. Gel fraction tests were performed on samples printed and cured leading to values of 75 ± 5%.
For the employed azobenzene unit, substituted at the 4′-position with oxygen atoms, the cis isomer has a lifetime of several hours at RT.43 However, isomerization back from the cis to the trans state for this chromophore can also be induced by irradiation with blue light.21 Therefore, subsequent irradiation with blue light was carried out for 30 minutes, leading to the recovery of the initial length (within 1% of error), as cis isomers are isomerized back to the thermodynamically stable trans form as in the original film (Fig. S5, ESI†).
It is important to note that irradiation with UV light also led to a change in the colour of the sample.9 While the thermodynamically stable azobenzene trans form leads to yellow-orange coloured films, the UV photogenerated cis isomers turn the film into dark orange. The irradiation of the sample with blue light leads to a recovery of the initial yellow-orange colour due to the isomerization of the cis back into the trans form.
If we focus back on the UV irradiation stage, considering the principle of energy conservation, the power leaving the sample during this UV irradiation stage, in the stationary state, must be the same as the luminous power that is being absorbed in the element. Although gradients in the sample are anticipated due to the non-homogenous intensity profile in the sample and the contact with fluid, it might be expected that the average temperature reached at this stationary stage of the irradiation could have a direct relationship with the intensity reaching the sample and an inverse one with the thermal conductivity of the surrounding medium that relates to the rate of evacuation of heat from the sample.44 Thus, the increment of the sample's temperature during irradiation in a medium like PBS with a high thermal conductivity, compared to that of air, is such that the removal of the light stimulus leads to a small loss of contraction of only 2% of the initial length of the sample. Taking into consideration the contraction of our samples during thermoactuation experiments in PBS (Fig. 2), and assuming that this loss of contraction upon UV removal could be mainly related to the elimination of the photothermal contribution, we can estimate that such an extra contraction of 2% upon UV illumination may represent a temperature increment of around 5 °C. It has to be noted that, when making this estimation, microstructure differences between the photoirradiated and the unexposed LCE are not considered. That is, UV light stimulation of the polymer leads to the presence of a cis population. Besides, while irradiated, the polymer is also subjected to continuous trans-cis-trans isomerization cycling as well as to additional and relevant gradients within the sample, as it is being photoheated within a fluid with good heat withdrawing capacity. In contrast, when the sample is actuated by a thermal stimulus, the azobenzene chromophore is in the all-trans state and the fluid temperature is homogeneous and equal to that of the sample. Nevertheless, despite all these assumptions, the small changes in contraction upon UV removal make plausible the estimation of a small photoinduced temperature increase of the sample of only a few degrees Celsius during the UV irradiation stage within the PBS fluid. Regarding the dynamics of the photoactuation under UV irradiation in PBS, it is remarkable that 50% of the maximum contraction value was quickly reached in just 5 seconds (Fig. 3c).
Furthermore, within the scope of our article, covering the potential of these actuators in biomedical applications, the photoinduced actuation of the LCE elements was also studied when the PBS fluid was at a human body temperature of 37 °C. Due to this increment of temperature, a contraction of around 3% with respect to the initial length at 30 °C can be estimated according to the thermomechanical experiments shown previously, leading to an initial length, for this experiment, of roughly 97% of the initial length displayed at 30 °C. In Fig. 3b, the photomechanical response represented by the normalized length of the LCE element when in PBS at 37 °C can be observed, along with its comparison with the same media and irradiation scheme while at RT. The result reveals similar qualitative behaviour for the experiment carried out at 37 °C and similar values of the maximum contraction, when compared to that performed at RT, demonstrating a mechanical work capacity of about 2 J kg−1 in these experiments. After switching off the UV LEDs, the contraction decreases and a remnant contraction of 5% in the sample was achieved (Fig. 3b), which was forced back to the initial dimensions by irradiation with blue light (Fig. 3d and Fig. S5, ESI†). Regarding dynamics, faster contraction speed to that measured in photoactuation experiments carried out in this same medium at RT was detected at 37 °C, achieving 50% of the maximum contraction after only 3 seconds (Fig. 3c). The faster response at 37 °C could be explained by a higher molecular mobility at this higher temperature. As for some applications, a simpler irradiation setup may be desirable, and these experiments were replicated upon photostimulation of one side of one LCE element (Fig. S6a, ESI†) with a 1 g metal weight to identify, if present, dissimilar photoinduced stresses across the film thickness that could lead to differences in the mechanical performance (magnitude of the contraction and its dynamics) in comparison to results with the two LEDs configuration. In order to reproduce the same total photon dosage throughout the experiments with both irradiation configurations, UV and blue LEDs irradiating only one face of the sample were adjusted to double the intensity used with each LED during the main experiment with two UV/blue LEDs irradiating both faces. Figs. S7 and S8 (ESI†) show the normalized length as well as the normalized contraction when actuation takes place in PBS buffer at RT and 37 °C, respectively, under irradiation of only one side of the sample. During UV irradiation of one face of the sample at 180 mW cm−2, maximum contractions while in PBS, at RT and at 37 °C, were 7% and 8%, respectively. 50% of these contraction values were achieved after about 5 and 3 seconds of switching on of UV light (single LED), for RT and 37 °C, respectively, thus resulting in similar response times to those found for the experiments with two LEDs.
When comparing the results of both irradiation configurations (illumination of one or both sides of the sample), a similar pattern of contraction speed towards the stationary value and contraction magnitudes was obtained, which is likely due to a similar total dose of UV light received by the samples. Although it might not be discarded that the differences in the light spatial distribution in the sample, for one side VS. two sides experiments, could introduce different temperatures and indeed also different cis population spatial distributions within the sample, these seem to have a marginal impact on the photomechanical response of the illuminated element while in the PBS fluid, given the very similar dynamics found for both configurations.
It is worth noting that these cycles of excitation/relaxation of one/both faces of the sample at room temperature and body temperature were successively repeated, up to five times, obtaining similar deformations and thus validating the integrity of the material under repeated cycle actuation.
The studies presented so far have demonstrated that the actuation in PBS, at our light intensity regimes, is mainly governed by the photochemical contribution caused by the isomerization of the azobenzene, as the photoinduced heating of the samples is diminished by the fluid, which acts as a heat sink and takes heat from the sample efficiently.10,27
To better understand the relationship between the photomechanical behaviour and the surrounding media in which the sample is immersed, experiments similar to those previously shown in PBS, but in other media of significantly different thermal properties, were carried out. Photoactuation in air was first analysed as this has a significantly different thermal conductivity, 23 times smaller than that of PBS. Thermoactuation experiments while in air revealed comparable results than those obtained in PBS and to values previously shown in the literature (Fig. S9, ESI†).9,32,34Fig. 4a shows the normalized length when irradiating both sides of a sample for experiments carried out in air. A maximum contraction of 47% of the initial length when irradiating two sides of the sample was achieved, requiring 4 seconds to reach 50% of that value (Fig. 4b).
The temperature of the samples was measured using a thermographic camera. The fast and large deformation during the first few seconds of UV light irradiation is accompanied by a fast and large temperature increment up to 81 °C (Fig. 4c). After switching off the light, the deformation rapidly decreases and a remnant contraction of 6% of the initial sample length is observed while the temperature quickly relaxes to RT in the absence of any light excitation. Subsequently, after the period in the dark, irradiation with blue light was started leading to the recovery of the initial length (within 1% of error) (Fig. S5, ESI†). Comparable maximum temperature values (79 °C) and maximum and remnant contractions (45% and 6%, respectively) were measured when irradiating only one side of the sample at a similar total photon dosage compared to experiments carried out with two LEDs (Fig. S10, ESI†). These comparable temperature values might indicate that the rate of transfer of energy to the surrounding air is similar in both configurations in the stationary state, leading to similar mechanical responses too.
The observed photoinduced behaviour in air can be explained by the photothermal and photochemical contributions to the contraction of the sample, previously described in the literature.9,10,15,16,20–22,27 The important photoinduced temperature increment of the sample during UV irradiation contributes to its contraction due to a heat-induced disorder of the mesogens, being especially important in magnitude for the high-intensity regime used in our experiments. On the other hand, the photoinduced generation of cis isomers also contributes to this disorder. When UV light is switched off, the temperature relaxes in a few seconds, so the thermal contribution to the contraction also decreases while the presence of azobenzene molecules in their cis state explains the remnant contraction.9,26,27 The magnitude of this remnant contraction is similar for both light exposure configurations (irradiation of one or both sides of the sample) which could be tentatively ascribed to a similar population of cis isomers reached after UV illumination and temperature relaxation processes although a different spatial distribution is expected. Interestingly, during thermoactuation (Fig. S9, ESI†), samples contracted around 36% at 80 °C when carrying the same load, which is below the contraction reached by exposure to UV light (45–47%), for both one or two LEDs configurations. Such a difference could be tentatively related to the photochemical contribution to the actuation, not present in thermoactuation experiments.
Subsequently, photomechanical behaviour was studied in a third media, a fluorinated fluid (Fluorinert FC-40) that has thermal properties between those of air and PBS (specific heat capacity: 1100 J kg−1 °C at 25 °C; and thermal conductivity: 0.065 W m−1 °C at 25 °C) to further research the effect of these properties on the mechanical actuation of our actuators in liquid media. As a prior reference, deformation behaviour under thermoactuation was checked, showing a trend similar to PBS and air (Fig. S9, ESI†). Regarding photoactuation, using two LEDs for irradiation of both sides of the sample, a contraction of 10% with respect to the initial length (Fig. 5a), much lower than the contraction obtained in air but larger than that reached in PBS, was achieved under the same irradiation conditions. While the relaxation of the contraction was around 2% of the initial length when UV light is switched off in the experiments carried out in PBS at RT, a change of 5% of the contraction of the initial length of the sample can be observed when suppressing the UV irradiation in the fluorinated fluid. In analogy with the experiments carried out in air and in PBS, this relaxation could be ascribed to temperature relaxation, and the remnant deformation after switching off the UV light may be correlated with the presence of cis isomers with a long lifetime at RT. Fluorinert FC-40, with a thermal conductivity 9 times smaller than PBS, dissipates less efficiently the heat generated in the sample, enabling a higher temperature to be reached by the sample during the UV irradiation period, this could explain the higher stationary value of the contraction in this medium. Considering contraction values shown during thermoactuation experiments in this fluid, the additional contraction of 5% of the initial length observed during UV irradiation with respect to the remnant contraction after the UV light stimulation period could represent an increment of the temperature of approximately 15 °C in the sample. A 50% of the UV photoinduced contraction was reached in just 4 s (Fig. 5b), which is faster than that in PBS under the same irradiation conditions at RT and similar to that in air. Minor differences between the dynamics of PBS and FC-40 at RT could be ascribed to the photothermal contribution to the contraction that is significant in the experiments carried out in Fluorinert FC-40 in addition to the photochemical effect, while in experiments in PBS, the photochemical contribution dominates.
The previously shown studies, carried out in air and in a fluorinated liquid, with thermal conductivities 23 and 9 times smaller than that of PBS, respectively, showed contractions of 47% and 10% during the UV exposure step, respectively, highlighting the relevance of the thermal properties of the medium in the photomechanical response.
For all the studied media, PBS, air and Fluorinert FC-40, the photochemical contribution is in the order of 5–6% contraction of the initial length. Though these values are lower than those previously reported in the literature for photochemically induced contractions carried out in air, the LCE 4D-printed actuators presented in this work represent promising digitally fabricated photoresponsive systems to operate in fluids and under physiological conditions.17,45 Further optimization can be easily pursued by improving the order achieved during processing and optimizing the polymer chemistry and/or the azobenzene content.
Actuation at human body temperature led to similar contraction values than those reached at RT; however, dynamics was significantly favoured faster by the molecular mobility at this higher temperature. Importantly, the photomechanical response of these actuators in PBS is similar to that observed in Milli-Q water, indicating that these actuators are highly insensitive to the presence of salts in the buffer, this being advantageous with respect to hydrogels, whose response is highly dependent on the composition of the fluid.
Although photochemical and photothermal contributions can be identified in the photomechanical response of our actuators in PBS, under the studied conditions, the photothermal contribution is smaller than the photochemical one, despite the range of intensities employed (180 mW cm−2). PBS efficiently dissipates the photoinduced heat of the sample, transferring this energy to the medium, leading to lower photothermal contributions that relax when UV light excitation ceases. In contrast, the photochemical contribution to the contraction, around 5% of the initial length, caused by the isomerization of the azobenzene units contributes to the contraction that remains after the UV light is switched off. The sample can be returned to the original length by exposure to blue light that reverts azobenzene cis isomers to the trans state. Equivalent studies carried out in air and in a fluorinated liquid, having these significantly different thermal conductivities, further confirm the importance of the photomechanical response of the thermal properties of the medium that drains heat from the sample reducing the photothermal contribution to the contraction. Irrespective of the medium, the photochemical contribution is in the same range of values, in the order of 5–6% contraction of the initial length.
It has also been shown that in the direct ink-printed elements, and for the regime of light intensities and wavelengths of excitation employed, the asymmetry introduced by irradiating only one single side of the sample, which could lead to stresses between the two actuator sides, does not produce significant differences in the magnitude of the photodeformation in the stationary state or in its dynamics when it is compared with schemes using irradiation of the two sides of the element with similar total photon dosages. These observations are valid both for air and PBS and they are relevant for the future applications of these soft photoactuators.
Despite not specifically designed for this purpose and out of the scope of our work, the reversible response of these LCE-printed actuators under physiological conditions may facilitate these actuators’ application in mimicking the contractile behaviour of certain tissues, such as gut, with biologically relevant contractions of 5–10% of the initial length and response times in the order of a few seconds, offering an alternative to overcome the limitations observed in hydrogels, in terms of mechanical strength and actuation rates.46 It is noted that local temperatures achieved by the LCE upon UV light irradiation at high intensities while in PBS, as in our experiments, were estimated to be around 5 °C. Though this value might not be suitable when handling cells, and light irradiation schemes might need to be optimized to make them compatible with living systems, this study may be a starting point for a further improvement of this material toward this type of application. To sum up, the described reversible contractile movements of our 4D-printed actuators, with time responses of a few seconds, demonstrated in a physiological environment (PBS) and at physiological temperatures, allow us to envision the use of these 4D-printed elements in the areas of microfluidics, soft robotic or biomedical applications.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d2tb02757g |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023 |