Using a photolithography process, scientists have created flat
polymer sheets that bend themselves into three-dimensional shapes when
exposed to water
When the petal of a flower is being formed, its shape is achieved by
cells in one area expanding more than cells in an adjacent area. This
uneven expansion causes the material to buckle, creating the desired
curves and creases. Scientists from the University of Massachusetts,
Amherst have taken that same principle, and applied it to flat polymer
gel sheets that fold themselves into three-dimensional shapes when
exposed to water. Some day, such sheets could serve a number of useful
purposes.
The researchers use a photolithography process, in which parts of
each sheet are masked with a thin painted-on coating, followed by an
exposure to ultraviolet light. The polymer that is masked from the UV
light will uniformly expand like a sponge when exposed to water. In
areas that
aren't masked, however, the UV light causes the
molecules within the polymer to become cross-linked. This means that the
material in those areas will only experience limited expansion when
water is added.
When areas with cross-linked molecules are flanked by areas of the
protected polymer, buckling will occur as the one area expands more than
the other. By strategically patterning the size and placement of the
cross-linked areas, along with subjecting some of them to a second UV
exposure, the scientists have been able to determine what 3D shapes the
sheets would expand into when wetted.
So far, they've managed to create basic shapes such as spheres,
saddles and cones. Down the road, however, the researchers believe that
the technology could be used in fields such as biomedicine, where
cultured cells could be designed to form themselves into blood vessels
or specific organs. It could also find use in applications such as
robotics, and tunable micro-optics.
It's reminiscent of research recently performed at North Carolina State University,
in which black stripes were printed onto pre-stressed flat sheets of
polymer. When subjected to infrared light, the striped areas absorbed
more energy than the surrounding material. This caused the underlying
polymer to contract, which in turn caused the sheets to fold themselves
into 3D structures.
A paper on the University of Massachusetts research was recently published in the journal
Science.
Source:
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
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