posted on 2022-06-01, 18:35authored byJeehae Shin, Wonhee Jo, Jae Hyuk Hwang, Jiseok Han, Woohwa Lee, Sungmin Park, Yong Seok Kim, Hee-Tak Kim, Dong-Gyun Kim
Structural
colors have advantages compared with chemical pigments
or dyes, such as iridescence, tunability, and unfading. Many studies
have focused on developing the ability to switch ON/OFF the structural
color; however, they often suffer from a simple and single stimulus,
remaining structural colors, and target selectivity. Herein, we present
regionally controlled multistimuli-responsive structural color switching
surfaces. The key part is the utilization of a micropatterned DNA-hydrogel
assembly on a single substrate. Each hydrogel network contains a unique
type of stimuli-responsive DNA motifs as an additional cross-linker
to exhibit swelling/deswelling via stimuli-responsive DNA interactions.
The approach enables overcoming the existing limitations and selectively
programming the DNA-hydrogel to a decrypted state (ON) and an encrypted
state (OFF) in response to multiple stimuli. Furthermore, the transitions
are reversible, providing cyclability. We envision the potential of
our method for diverse applications, such as sensors or anticounterfeiting,
requiring multistimuli-responsive structural color switching surfaces.