Stimuli-Responsive Polymer Nanocomposites Inspired by the Sea Cucumber Dermis
Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center · Case Western Reserve University
Abstract
Sea cucumbers, like other echinoderms, have the ability to rapidly and reversibly alter the stiffness of their inner dermis. It has been proposed that the modulus of this tissue is controlled by regulating the interactions among collagen fibrils, which reinforce a low-modulus matrix. We report on a family of polymer nanocomposites, which mimic this architecture and display similar chemoresponsive mechanic adaptability. Materials based on a rubbery host polymer and rigid cellulose nanofibers exhibit a reversible reduction by a factor of 40 of the tensile modulus, for example, from 800 to 20 megapascals (MPa), upon exposure to a chemical regulator that mediates nanofiber interactions. Using a host polymer with a…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 36.67
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 25
Authors
5- JRJeffrey R. Capadona
Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University
- KSKadhiravan Shanmuganathan
Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University
- DJDustin J. Tyler
Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University
- SJStuart J. RowanCorresponding
Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University
- CWChristoph WederCorresponding
Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University
Topics & keywords
- Polymer
- Dermis
- Modulus
- Materials science
- Nanofiber
- Ultimate tensile strength
- Nanocomposite
- Composite material
- Life below water