Electric-Field-Controlled Chemical Reaction via Piezo-Chemistry Creates Programmable Material Stiffness
Abstrak
The spatial and temporal control of material properties at a distance has yielded many unique innovations including photo-patterning, 3D-printing, and architected material design. To date, most of these innovations have relied on light, heat, sound, or electric current as stimuli for controlling the material properties. Here, we demonstrate that an electric field can induce chemical reactions and subsequent polymerization in composites via piezoelectrically-mediated transduction. The response to an electric field rather than through direct contact with an electrode is mediated by a nanoparticle transducer, i.e., piezoelectric ZnO, which mediates reactions between thiol and alkene monomers, resulting in tunable moduli as a function of voltage, time, and the frequency of the applied AC power. The reactivity of the mixture and the modulus of a naïve material containing these elements can be programmed based on the distribution of the electric field strength. This programmability results in multi-stiffness gels. Additionally, the system can be adjusted for the formation of an electro-adhesive. This simple and generalizable design opens new avenues for facile application in adaptive damping and variable-rigidity materials, adhesive, soft robotics, and potentially tissue engineering.
Topik & Kata Kunci
Penulis (15)
Jun Wang
Zhao Wang
Jorge Ayarza
Ian Frankel
Chao-Wei Huang
Kai Qian
Yixiao Dong
Pin Ruei Huang
Katie Kloska
Chao Zhang
Siqi Zou
Matthew Mason
Chong Liu
Nicholas Boechler
Aaron P. Esser Kahn
Akses Cepat
- Tahun Terbit
- 2025
- Bahasa
- en
- Sumber Database
- arXiv
- Akses
- Open Access ✓