Liquid Crystal Elastomer Metamaterials with Giant Biaxial Thermal Shrinkage for Enhancing Skin Regeneration

Jun Wu, Shenglian Yao, Hang Zhang, Weitao Man, Zhili Bai, Fan Zhang, Xiumei Wang, Daining Fang*, Yihui Zhang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

128 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Liquid crystal elastomers (LCEs) are a class of soft active materials of increasing interest, because of their excellent actuation and optical performances. While LCEs show biomimetic mechanical properties (e.g., elastic modulus and strength) that can be matched with those of soft biological tissues, their biointegrated applications have been rarely explored, in part, due to their high actuation temperatures (typically above 60 °C) and low biaxial actuation performances (e.g., actuation strain typically below 10%). Here, unique mechanics-guided designs and fabrication schemes of LCE metamaterials are developed that allow access to unprecedented biaxial actuation strain (−53%) and biaxial coefficient of thermal expansion (−33 125 ppm K−1), significantly surpassing those (e.g., −20% and −5950 ppm K−1) reported previously. A low-temperature synthesis method with use of optimized composition ratios enables LCE metamaterials to offer reasonably high actuation stresses/strains at a substantially reduced actuation temperature (46 °C). Such biocompatible LCE metamaterials are integrated with medical dressing to develop a breathable, shrinkable, hemostatic patch as a means of noninvasive treatment. In vivo animal experiments of skin repair with both round and cross-shaped wounds demonstrate advantages of the hemostatic patch over conventional strategies (e.g., medical dressing and suturing) in accelerating skin regeneration, while avoiding scar and keloid generation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2106175
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume33
Issue number45
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 11 Nov 2021

Keywords

  • actuation temperature
  • biaxial actuation stress/strain
  • hemostatic patch
  • liquid crystal elastomer metamaterials
  • skin regeneration

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