TY - JOUR
T1 - Electrochemical Bonding of Hydrogels at Rigid Surfaces
AU - Qiu, Xiaxin
AU - Huang, Xiaowen
AU - Zhang, Lidong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2022/12/15
Y1 - 2022/12/15
N2 - Flexible hydrogels can be chemically/physically bonded on soft surfaces. However, there is a lack of a facile method to build strong interfacial adhesion between hydrogel and various rigid surfaces. Herein, an electrochemical bonding protocol, which improves the interfacial adhesion energy of hydrogel from initial 8 to 3480 J m−2, ≈435 times enhancement at rigid glass surface, superior to the most of traditional methods, is proposed. A series of electrochemical bonding models to analyze the bonding mechanism, is demonstrated. The results indicate that the electrode reactions generate Fe3+ ions at the anode and OH− ions at the cathode, which migrate and react to form nanoparticles of Fe(OH)3. These nanoparticles form hump-like physical structures at the interface and work as mechanical-bonding sites, enabling the strong interfacial adhesion. Upon applying acidic solution to decompose the nanoparticles, the strong adhesion can be weakened to easily remove hydrogel from the bonded surface. The electrochemically-bonded hydrogel can maintain its adhesion in water, which enables the electrochemical bonding of hydrogels for repairing various damaged surfaces such as plastic water tubes/bags, indicating promising potential for adhesive engineering applications.
AB - Flexible hydrogels can be chemically/physically bonded on soft surfaces. However, there is a lack of a facile method to build strong interfacial adhesion between hydrogel and various rigid surfaces. Herein, an electrochemical bonding protocol, which improves the interfacial adhesion energy of hydrogel from initial 8 to 3480 J m−2, ≈435 times enhancement at rigid glass surface, superior to the most of traditional methods, is proposed. A series of electrochemical bonding models to analyze the bonding mechanism, is demonstrated. The results indicate that the electrode reactions generate Fe3+ ions at the anode and OH− ions at the cathode, which migrate and react to form nanoparticles of Fe(OH)3. These nanoparticles form hump-like physical structures at the interface and work as mechanical-bonding sites, enabling the strong interfacial adhesion. Upon applying acidic solution to decompose the nanoparticles, the strong adhesion can be weakened to easily remove hydrogel from the bonded surface. The electrochemically-bonded hydrogel can maintain its adhesion in water, which enables the electrochemical bonding of hydrogels for repairing various damaged surfaces such as plastic water tubes/bags, indicating promising potential for adhesive engineering applications.
KW - electrochemical bonding
KW - hydrogels
KW - interfacial adhesion
KW - nanoparticles
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85142271301
U2 - 10.1002/smtd.202201132
DO - 10.1002/smtd.202201132
M3 - 文章
C2 - 36382565
AN - SCOPUS:85142271301
SN - 2366-9608
VL - 6
JO - Small Methods
JF - Small Methods
IS - 12
M1 - 2201132
ER -