Issue 12, 2019

Mechanical behaviour of contractile gels based on light-driven molecular motors

Abstract

The networking of individual artificial molecular motors into collective actuation systems is a promising approach for the design of active materials working out of thermodynamic equilibrium. Here, we report the first mechanical studies on active polymer gels built by integrating light-driven rotary molecular motors as reticulation units in polymer networks. We correlate the volume ratio before and after light irradiation with the change of the elastic modulus, and we reveal the universal maximum mechanical efficiency of such gels related to their critical overlap concentration before chemical reticulation. We also show the major importance of heterogeneities in the macroscopic contraction process and we confirm that these materials can increase their internal energy by the motorized winding of their polymer chains.

Graphical abstract: Mechanical behaviour of contractile gels based on light-driven molecular motors

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
29 Jan 2019
Accepted
26 Feb 2019
First published
26 Feb 2019

Nanoscale, 2019,11, 5197-5202

Mechanical behaviour of contractile gels based on light-driven molecular motors

J. Colard-Itté, Q. Li, D. Collin, G. Mariani, G. Fuks, E. Moulin, E. Buhler and N. Giuseppone, Nanoscale, 2019, 11, 5197 DOI: 10.1039/C9NR00950G

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