Environmentally Responsive Hydrogels:Development and Integration with Hard Materials

abstract: Environmentally responsive hydrogels are one interesting class of soft materials. Due to their remarkable responsiveness to stimuli such as temperature, pH, or light, they have attracted widespread attention in many fields. However, certain functionality of these materials alone is often l...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Chatterjee, Prithwish (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.35999
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-35999
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-359992018-06-22T03:06:43Z Environmentally Responsive Hydrogels:Development and Integration with Hard Materials abstract: Environmentally responsive hydrogels are one interesting class of soft materials. Due to their remarkable responsiveness to stimuli such as temperature, pH, or light, they have attracted widespread attention in many fields. However, certain functionality of these materials alone is often limited in comparison to other materials such as silicon; thus, there is a need to integrate soft and hard materials for the advancement of environmental-ly responsive materials. Conventional hydrogels lack good mechanical properties and have inherently slow response time, important characteristics which must be improved before the hydrogels can be integrated with silicon. In the present dissertation work, both these important attrib-utes of a temperature responsive hydrogel, poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAAm), were improved by adopting a low temperature polymerization process and adding a sili-cate compound, tetramethyl orthosilicate. Furthermore, the transition temperature was modulated by adjusting the media quality in which the hydrogels were equilibrated, e.g. by adding a co-solvent (methanol) or an anionic surfactant (sodium dodecyl sulfate). In-terestingly, the results revealed that, based on the hydrogels’ porosity, there were appre-ciable differences when the PNIPAAm hydrogels interacted with the media molecules. Next, an adhesion mechanism was developed in order to transfer silicon thin film onto the hydrogel surface. This integration provided a means of mechanical buckling of the thin silicon film due to changes in environmental stimuli (e.g., temperature, pH). We also investigated how novel transfer printing techniques could be used to generate pat-terned deformation of silicon thin film when integrated on a planar hydrogel substrate. Furthermore, we explore multilayer hybrid hydrogel structures formed by the integration of different types of hydrogels that have tunable curvatures under the influence of differ-ent stimuli. Silicon thin film integration on such tunable curvature substrates reveal char-acteristic reversible buckling of the thin film in the presence of multiple stimuli. Finally, different approaches of incorporating visible light response in PNIPAAm are discussed. Specifically, a chemical chromophore- spirobenzopyran was synthesized and integrated through chemical cross-linking into the PNIPAAm hydrogels. Further, methods of improving the light response and mechanical properties were also demonstrat-ed. Interestingly, such a system was shown to have potential application as light modulated topography altering system Dissertation/Thesis Chatterjee, Prithwish (Author) Dai, Lenore L. (Advisor) Jiang, Hanqing (Advisor) Lind, Mary Laura (Committee member) Yu, Hongyu (Committee member) Yu, Hongbin (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Chemical engineering Materials Science Polymer chemistry Characterization Hydrogels Mechanical properties Smart Materials Thermal properties eng 170 pages Doctoral Dissertation Chemical Engineering 2015 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.35999 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Chemical engineering
Materials Science
Polymer chemistry
Characterization
Hydrogels
Mechanical properties
Smart Materials
Thermal properties
spellingShingle Chemical engineering
Materials Science
Polymer chemistry
Characterization
Hydrogels
Mechanical properties
Smart Materials
Thermal properties
Environmentally Responsive Hydrogels:Development and Integration with Hard Materials
description abstract: Environmentally responsive hydrogels are one interesting class of soft materials. Due to their remarkable responsiveness to stimuli such as temperature, pH, or light, they have attracted widespread attention in many fields. However, certain functionality of these materials alone is often limited in comparison to other materials such as silicon; thus, there is a need to integrate soft and hard materials for the advancement of environmental-ly responsive materials. Conventional hydrogels lack good mechanical properties and have inherently slow response time, important characteristics which must be improved before the hydrogels can be integrated with silicon. In the present dissertation work, both these important attrib-utes of a temperature responsive hydrogel, poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAAm), were improved by adopting a low temperature polymerization process and adding a sili-cate compound, tetramethyl orthosilicate. Furthermore, the transition temperature was modulated by adjusting the media quality in which the hydrogels were equilibrated, e.g. by adding a co-solvent (methanol) or an anionic surfactant (sodium dodecyl sulfate). In-terestingly, the results revealed that, based on the hydrogels’ porosity, there were appre-ciable differences when the PNIPAAm hydrogels interacted with the media molecules. Next, an adhesion mechanism was developed in order to transfer silicon thin film onto the hydrogel surface. This integration provided a means of mechanical buckling of the thin silicon film due to changes in environmental stimuli (e.g., temperature, pH). We also investigated how novel transfer printing techniques could be used to generate pat-terned deformation of silicon thin film when integrated on a planar hydrogel substrate. Furthermore, we explore multilayer hybrid hydrogel structures formed by the integration of different types of hydrogels that have tunable curvatures under the influence of differ-ent stimuli. Silicon thin film integration on such tunable curvature substrates reveal char-acteristic reversible buckling of the thin film in the presence of multiple stimuli. Finally, different approaches of incorporating visible light response in PNIPAAm are discussed. Specifically, a chemical chromophore- spirobenzopyran was synthesized and integrated through chemical cross-linking into the PNIPAAm hydrogels. Further, methods of improving the light response and mechanical properties were also demonstrat-ed. Interestingly, such a system was shown to have potential application as light modulated topography altering system === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Chemical Engineering 2015
author2 Chatterjee, Prithwish (Author)
author_facet Chatterjee, Prithwish (Author)
title Environmentally Responsive Hydrogels:Development and Integration with Hard Materials
title_short Environmentally Responsive Hydrogels:Development and Integration with Hard Materials
title_full Environmentally Responsive Hydrogels:Development and Integration with Hard Materials
title_fullStr Environmentally Responsive Hydrogels:Development and Integration with Hard Materials
title_full_unstemmed Environmentally Responsive Hydrogels:Development and Integration with Hard Materials
title_sort environmentally responsive hydrogels:development and integration with hard materials
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.35999
_version_ 1718700924458762240