Stanford’ s touch sensitive plastic skin heals itself
A team of Stanford chemists and
engineers has created the first synthetic material that is both sensitive to
touch and capable of healing itself quickly and repeatedly at room temperature.
The advance could lead to smarter prosthetics or resilient personal electronics
that repair themselves.
A small piece of the self-healing
material is sliced with a scalpel. The researchers say the material repairs
itself in about 30 minutes.
Nobody knows the remarkable
properties of human skin like the researchers struggling to emulate it. Not
only is our skin sensitive – sending the brain precise information about
pressure and temperature – but it also heals efficiently to preserve a
protective barrier against the world. Combining these two features in a single
synthetic material presented an exciting challenge for Stanford chemical
engineering Professor Zhenan Bao and her
team.
Now, they have succeeded in making
the first material that can both sense subtle pressure and heal itself when
torn or cut. Their findings will be published Nov. 11 in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.
In the last decade, there have been
major advances in synthetic skin, said Bao, the study's principal investigator,
but even the most effective self-healing materials had major drawbacks. Some
had to be exposed to high temperatures, making them impractical for day-to-day
use. Others could heal at room temperature, but repairing a cut changed their
mechanical or chemical structure, so they could heal themselves only once. Most
important, no self-healing material was a good bulk conductor of electricity, a
crucial property.
"To interface this kind of
material with the digital world, ideally you want it to be conductive,"
said Benjamin Chee-Keong Tee, a researcher on the project.
A
new recipe
The researchers succeeded by
combining two ingredients to get what Bao calls "the best of both
worlds" – the self-healing ability of a plastic polymer and the
conductivity of a metal.
They started with a plastic
consisting of long chains of molecules joined by hydrogen bonds – the
relatively weak attractions between the positively charged region of one atom
and the negatively charged region of the next.
"These dynamic bonds allow the
material to self-heal," said Chao Wang, another member of the research
team. The molecules easily break apart, but then when they reconnect, the bonds
reorganize themselves and restore the structure of the material after it gets damaged,
he said. The result is a bendable material, which even at room temperature
feels a bit like saltwater taffy left in the fridge.
To this resilient polymer, the
researchers added tiny particles of nickel, which increased its mechanical
strength. The nanoscale surfaces of the nickel particles are rough, which
proved important in making the material conductive. Tee compared these surface
features to "mini-machetes," with each jutting edge concentrating an
electrical field and making it easier for current to flow from one particle to
the next.
The result was a polymer with
uncommon characteristics. "Most plastics are good insulators, but this is
an excellent conductor," Bao said.
Bouncing
back
The next step was to see how well
the material could restore both its mechanical strength and its electrical
conductivity after damage.
Post doctoral scholar Chao Wang cuts
through a sample of the self-healing plastic material developed in the Bao lab.
The researchers took a thin strip of
the material and cut it in half with a scalpel. After gently pressing the
pieces together for a few seconds, the researchers found the material gained
back 75 percent of its original strength and electrical conductivity. The
material was restored close to 100 percent in about 30 minutes. "Even
human skin takes days to heal. So I think this is quite cool," Tee said.
What's more, the same sample could
be cut repeatedly in the same place. After 50 cuts and repairs, a sample
withstood bending and stretching just like the original.
The composite nature of the material
created a new engineering challenge for the team. Bao and her co-authors found
that although nickel was key to making the material strong and conductive, it
also got in the way of the healing process by preventing the hydrogen bonds
from reconnecting as well as they should.
For future generations of the
material, Bao said, the team might adjust the size and shape of the
nanoparticles, or even the chemical properties of the polymer, to get around
this trade-off.
Nonetheless, Wang said the extent of
these self-healing properties was truly surprising: "Before our work, it
was very hard to imagine that this kind of flexible, conductive material could
also be self-healing."
Sensitive
to the touch
The team also explored how to use
the material as a sensor. For the electrons that make up an electrical current,
trying to pass through this material is like trying to cross a stream by
hopping from stone to stone. The stones in this analogy are the nickel
particles, and the distance separating them determines how much energy an
electron will need to free itself from one stone and move to another.
Twisting or putting pressure on the
synthetic skin changes the distance between the nickel particles and,
therefore, the ease with which electrons can move. These subtle changes in
electrical resistance can be translated into information about pressure and
tension on the skin.
Tee said that the material is
sensitive enough to detect the pressure of a handshake. It might, therefore, be
ideal for use in prosthetics, Bao added. The material is sensitive not only to
downward pressure but also to flexing, so a prosthetic limb might someday be
able to register the degree of bend in a joint.
Tee pointed out other commercial
possibilities. Electrical devices and wires coated in this material could
repair themselves and get electricity flowing again without costly and
difficult maintenance, particularly in hard-to-reach places, such as inside
building walls or vehicles.
Next up, Bao said, is the team's
goal to make the material stretchy and transparent, so that it might be
suitable for wrapping and overlaying electronic devices or display screens.
Ranulfo Allen, a graduate student in
chemical engineering, also contributed to this research. The research was
supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research.
Kelly Servick is a science-writing
intern working for the Stanford University School of Engineering.
Stanford Report, November 11, 2012
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