Author
Listed:
- Huamin Li
(Yangzhou University, School of Chemistry and Materials)
- Haidi Wu
(Yangzhou University, School of Chemistry and Materials)
- Cheng Guan
(Yangzhou University, School of Chemistry and Materials)
- Wenjie Hu
(Yangzhou University, School of Chemistry and Materials)
- Wenwen Su
(Yangzhou University, School of Chemistry and Materials)
- Dingdong Chen
(Yangzhou University, School of Chemistry and Materials)
- Jiefeng Gao
(Yangzhou University, School of Chemistry and Materials)
Abstract
Addressing the persistent challenge of reconciling extreme mechanical robustness with tissue-mimetic functionality in hydrogels, we present a phase-transition-guided hierarchical engineering strategy that progressively architectures anisotropic polyvinyl alcohol networks through sequential mechanical training, wet-annealing, and salting-out. This triphasic processing induces programmable structural evolution: (1) mechanical training aligns polymer chains, (2) wet-annealing relaxes the stress while stabilizes oriented crystallites through solvent-plasticized rearrangement, and (3) salting-out densifies the network via chain aggregation and hydrogen-bond proliferation. The resultant hierarchical architecture achieves high fatigue resistance (threshold: 2083 J·m−2) through multi-scale energy dissipation: sacrificial hydrogen bonds consume energy, while aligned crystalline domains pin the crack and deflect crack propagation via anisotropic stress redistribution. Demonstrating tissue-surpassing mechanics (tensile strength: 61 ± 3 MPa, toughness: 106 ± 27 MJ·m−3, fracture energy: 85 ± 9 kJ m−2) coupled with biological functionality, the hydrogel directs cell alignment through contact guidance while resisting swelling-induced dimensional instability (
Suggested Citation
Huamin Li & Haidi Wu & Cheng Guan & Wenjie Hu & Wenwen Su & Dingdong Chen & Jiefeng Gao, 2025.
"Hierarchical crack-resistant, tissue-mimetic hydrogels enabled by progressive nanocrystallization of anisotropic polymer networks,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-14, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-65917-3
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-65917-3
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