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Systematic control of anisotropy and percolation in patchy particle gels

POSTER

Abstract

Patchy particle interactions enable the design of so-called ‘equilibrium gels’, a system where arrest is achieved without an underlying phase separation, resulting in structurally equilibrated gels which do not undergo coarsening-induced aging. We show that nanoparticle-incorporated supramolecular hydrogels - consisting of reversibly polymer-grafted metallic nanoparticles which are cross-linked with end-functionalized polymers – exhibit behaviour consistent with systems undergoing equilibrium arrest. We show that the interaction patchiness of this system can be controlled through the ratio of polymeric linkers to nanoparticles, thus resulting in a canonical system with tunable self-assembly, local structural anisotropy, and mechanical percolation thresholds. Moreover, we show that the addition of metal ions as a second competitive reversible cross-linking species results in the stabilization of locally anisotropic nanoparticle structures, thus resulting in a globally anisotropic structure and a dramatic reduction in the mechanical percolation threshold of the nanoparticle network in the hydrogel. These findings allow the systematic design of stable particle gels with tunable morphology and rigidity.

Presenters

  • Jake Song

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

Authors

  • Jake Song

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • Brian Lynch

    North Carolina State University

  • Mehedi Rizvi

    North Carolina State University

  • Jan Ilavsky

    ANL, Argonne National Laboratory

  • David Mankus

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • Joseph Tracy

    North Carolina State University, Materials Science and Engineering, North Carolina State University

  • Niels Holten-Andersen

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • Gareth H McKinley

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, Mechanical Engineering, MIT, Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology