A depth-profiled digital microscope photograph of a 5-layer alternating laminate film of immiscible dynamic polymer films which have been damaged, autonomously aligned, self-healed and then pulled apart on a non-self-healing subject (to show the location of the damage). Credit: Bao Group, Stanford U.
Human skin is amazing. It senses temperature,
pressure, and texture. It's able to stretch and spring back, time and again.
And it provides a barrier between the body and external threats—bacteria,
viruses, toxins, ultraviolet radiation and more. Engineers are, accordingly,
keen to create synthetic skin. They imagine robots and prosthetic limbs that
have skin-like qualities—not the least of which is skin's remarkable ability to
heal.
"We've
achieved what we believe to be the first demonstration of a multi-layer, thin
film sensor that automatically realigns during healing. This is a critical step
toward mimicking human skin, which has multiple layers
that all re-assemble correctly during the healing process," said Chris Cooper, a
Ph.D. candidate at Stanford University who, along with postdoctoral researcher
Sam Root, is co-author of a new study published in Science.
Layering is
critical to mimicking skin's many qualities. "It is soft and stretchable.
But if you puncture it, slice it, or cut it—each layer will selectively heal
with itself to restore the overall function," Root says. "Just like
real skin."
Skin, too, is
formed of layers. It has just evolved immune mechanisms that rebuild the tissue
with the original layered structure through a complex process involving
molecular recognition and signaling.
"With true
'skin' the layers should realign naturally and autonomously," Cooper says.
Root says the team, led by Professor Zhenan Bao at Stanford University, might be able to create multi-tiered synthetic skin with individually functional layers as thin as a micron each, perhaps less. Thin enough that a stack of 10 or more layers would be no thicker than a sheet of paper. "One layer might sense pressure, another temperature, and yet another tension," says Root. The material of different layers can be engineered to sense thermal, mechanical, or electrical changes.
Magnetic assembly of the core-shell fibers.
Thermal welding of the assembled fiber at 70°C for 5 min with a heat gun. The
welded device is bent, twisted, and stretched to show mechanical robustness.
Credit: Bao Group, Stanford University
A novel approach
"We reported the first
multi-layer self-healing synthetic electronic skin in 2012 in Nature Nanotechnology," says Bao. "There has been a lot of
interest around the world in pursuing multi-layer synthetic skin since
then." What sets their current work apart is that the layers
self-recognize and align with like layers during the healing process, restoring
functionality layer by layer as they heal. Existing self-healing synthetic
skins must be realigned manually—by humans. Even a slight misalignment in
layers might compromise functional recovery.
The secret is in the materials. The
backbone of each layer is formed of long molecular chains connected
periodically by dynamic hydrogen bonds, similar to those holding the
double-helix of DNA strands together, that allow the material to stretch
repeatedly without tearing. Rubber and latex are two well-known natural polymers,
but there are countless synthetic polymers, too. The key is to design polymer
molecular structures and choose the right combination for each layer—first
layer of one polymer, the second of another and so forth.
The researchers used PPG
(polypropylene glycol) and PDMS (polydimethylsiloxane, better known as
silicone). Both have rubber-like electrical and mechanical properties and biocompatibility and can be mixed with nano-
or microparticles to enable electric conductivity. Critically, the chosen
polymers and their respective composites are immiscible—they do not mix with
one another yet, due to the hydrogen bonding, they adhere to one another well
to create a durable, multilayer material.
Both polymers have the advantage
that when warmed they soften and flow, but solidify as they cool. Thus, by
warming the synthetic skin, the researchers were able to speed the healing
process. At room temperature, healing can take as long as a week, but when
heated to just 70°C (158°F), the self-alignment and healing happen in about 24
hours. The two materials were carefully designed to have similar viscous and
elastic responses to external stress over an appropriate temperature range.
"Skin is slow to heal, too. I
cut my finger the other day and it was still healing four or five days
later," Cooper says. "For us, the most important part is that it
heals to recover functions without our input or effort."
Pieces of synthetic skin are drawn
together magnetically; electrical conductivity returns as they heal, and the
LED lights. Credit: Bao Group, Stanford U
A step further
With a
successful prototype, the researchers then took things a step further, working
with Professor Renee Zhao at Stanford University, adding magnetic
materials to their polymer layers, allowing the synthetic skin to not only heal
but also to self-assemble from separate pieces. "Combining with magnetic
field-guided navigation and induction heating," says Zhao, "we may be
able to build reconfigurable soft robots that can change shape and sense their
deformation on demand."
"Our
long-term vision is to create devices that can recover from extreme damage. For
example, imagine a device that when torn into pieces and ripped apart, could
reconstruct itself autonomously," Cooper says, showing a short video of
several pieces of stratified synthetic
skin immersed in water. Drawn together magnetically, the pieces inch
toward one another, eventually reassembling. As they heal, their electrical
conductivity returns, and an LED attached atop the material glows to prove it.
Pieces of stratified synthetic skin are immersed
in water. Drawn together magnetically, the pieces reassemble. As they heal,
their electrical conductivity returns, and an LED attached atop the material
glows to demonstrate it. Credit: Bao Group, Stanford University
Among their next steps, the
researchers will work to make the layers as thin as possible and toward
creating layers of varying function. The current prototype was engineered to
sense pressure, and additional layers engineered to sense changes in temperature or
strain could be included.
In terms of future vision, the team imagines, potentially, robots that could be swallowed in pieces and then self-assemble inside the body to perform non-invasive medical treatments. Other applications include multi-sensory, self-healing electronic skins that form-fit to robots and provide them with a sense of touch.
by Andrew Myers, Stanford University
Source: Layers
of self-healing electronic skin realign autonomously when cut (techxplore.com)
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