The research team also found that their anti-fatigue hydrogel bonding method can be integrated into other processing methods. They specifically cited dip coating, as it could produce a uniform, anti-fatigue hydrogel coating for different materials and geometric structures. This development provides opportunities for items such as glass fiber optics and tubes, stainless steel springs, leaf-like rubber, and metal ball & socket joints.
Hydrogels offer high water content and a low coefficient of friction, so their introduction reduces the wear against metal. The high strength and toughness, combined with their anti-fatigue bonding, effectively solve the technical challenges previously preventing the use of hydrogel as artificial cartilage.
The universality of the design principle allows its further use in developing hydrogel equipment with long-term value, such as hydrogel coatings and artificial joints.
Assistant Professor Ji Liu is one of the co-first authors of the paper, and SUSTech is the first affiliation. Co-authors include MIT postdoc Shaoting Lin , MIT doctoral candidate Xinyue Liu , and Assistant Professor Zhao Qin of Syracuse University . HUST Professor Jianfeng Zang and MIT Professor Xuanhe Zhao are the corresponding authors of the paper.
This project received support from the Centers for Mechanical Engineering Research and Education at MIT and SUSTech (MechERE Centers at MIT and SUSTech).
Paper link: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-020-14871-3