Soft network composite materials with deterministic and bio-inspired designs

  • Kyung In Jang
  • , Ha Uk Chung
  • , Sheng Xu
  • , Chi Hwan Lee
  • , Haiwen Luan
  • , Jaewoong Jeong
  • , Huanyu Cheng
  • , Gwang Tae Kim
  • , Sang Youn Han
  • , Jung Woo Lee
  • , Jeonghyun Kim
  • , Moongee Cho
  • , Fuxing Miao
  • , Yiyuan Yang
  • , Han Na Jung
  • , Matthew Flavin
  • , Howard Liu
  • , Gil Woo Kong
  • , Ki Jun Yu
  • , Sang Il Rhee
  • Jeahoon Chung, Byunggik Kim, Jean Won Kwak, Myoung Hee Yun, Jin Young Kim, Young Min Song, Ungyu Paik, Yihui Zhang, Yonggang Huang, John A. Rogers

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

484 Scopus citations

Abstract

Hard and soft structural composites found in biology provide inspiration for the design of advanced synthetic materials. Many examples of bio-inspired hard materials can be found in the literature; far less attention has been devoted to soft systems. Here we introduce deterministic routes to low-modulus thin film materials with stress/strain responses that can be tailored precisely to match the non-linear properties of biological tissues, with application opportunities that range from soft biomedical devices to constructs for tissue engineering. The approach combines a low-modulus matrix with an open, stretchable network as a structural reinforcement that can yield classes of composites with a wide range of desired mechanical responses, including anisotropic, spatially heterogeneous, hierarchical and self-similar designs. Demonstrative application examples in thin, skin-mounted electrophysiological sensors with mechanics precisely matched to the human epidermis and in soft, hydrogel-based vehicles for triggered drug release suggest their broad potential uses in biomedical devices.

Original languageEnglish
Article number6566
JournalNature Communications
Volume6
DOIs
StatePublished - 18 Mar 2015

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.

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