posted on 2014-08-12, 00:00authored byVinita Yadav, Ryan A. Pavlick, Stephen
M. Meckler, Ayusman Sen
Developing methods to detect and
repair damage in polymers is an
active area of research. Many of the previously described methods
suffer from the lack of long-term stability of the reagents, which
are typically preincorporated into the polymer. Also, they tend to
be specific to certain types of polymeric materials. In this paper,
we describe a general method for detection and repair of cracks in
polymers using a salt-triggered mechanism. The process consists of
a polymer embedded with salt that works as a “reporter”.
Upon addition of a detection or healing agent, damaged areas in the
polymer leach out salt, powering flows and activating the reagents
in the fluid. Detection is possible with fluorescent quantum dots,
which aggregate at the crack site. Repair is shown to occur through
two different strategies. The first repair strategy involves high
ionic strength triggered destabilization of oil-in-water emulsions,
transporting polymerization agents, resulting in polymer deposition
at the damage site. The second, more biocompatible strategy, involves
using an enzyme, urease, and its catalytic hydrolysis of urea to deposit
solid calcium carbonate in the crack. The solution of the detection
or healing agent can be added “as needed” thereby overcoming
the problem of reagent instability.