posted on 2024-01-24, 23:06authored byPaula
A. Pranda, Aaron Hedegaard, Hyunki Kim, Jason Clapper, Eric Nelson, Lindsey Hines, Ryan C. Hayward, Timothy J. White
Pressure-sensitive
adhesives (PSAs) are widely employed in consumer
goods, health care, and commercial industry. Anisotropic adhesion
of PSAs is often desirable to enable high force capacity coupled with
facile release and has typically been realized through the introduction
of complex surface and/or bulk microstructures while also maintaining
high surface conformability. Although effective, microstructure fabrication
can add cost and complexity to adhesive fabrication. Here, we explore
aligned liquid crystalline elastomers (LCEs) as directional adhesives.
Aligned LCEs exhibit direction-dependent stiffness, dissipation, and
nonlinear deformation under load. By varying the cross-link content,
we study how the bulk mechanical properties of LCEs correlate to their
peel strength and peel anisotropy. We demonstrate up to a 9-fold difference
in peel force measured when the LCE is peeled parallel vs perpendicular
to the alignment axis. Opportunities to spatially localize adhesion
are presented in a monolithic LCE patterned with different director
orientations.