Hokkaido University Research Profiles

Japanese

DN gel: 1

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  • Flexible and Strong Gel

    New materials for the age of welfare

    What kind of material should be used in an age when we are required to improve our quality of life? The answer is strong gels such as double network gels. Tough gels will help revolutionize the quality of medical devices, tissue substitutes and biomimetics.

    Research

    Conventionally, elastomers have widely been used as soft materials, but in situations where they are used as contact points with living organisms or as their substitutes, hydrophobicity is a critically important factor. Since hydrous materials strongly reflect the physical properties of water, they exhibit physical properties that are very similar to biological tissues. For example, heat transfer and electromagnetic wave absorption properties of hydrous materials are similar to those of living tissues, and their surface friction is as low as that of body tissues. Although gel is the most common hydrophilic soft material, its mechanical strength has been low and its application has thus been limited. We have succeeded in developing a highly strong double network (DN) gel that does not break, even when a truck drives over it, despite 90% water content. This has greatly expanded the possibilities of gel applications. While working to examine the toughness of DN gels, we have discovered the “sacrificial bonding principle,” arriving at the concept of strengthening various materials. In recent years, we have been developing various other types of strong gels besides DN gels.