Interpenetrating
Liquid-Crystal Polyurethane/Polyacrylate
Elastomer with Ultrastrong Mechanical Property
Posted on 2019-08-29 - 20:03
Liquid-crystal elastomer
(LCE) materials, which have been developed
and investigated for 4 decades, still lack real industrial applications.
The fundamental obstacle is the modest force of LCEs generated in
the LC-to-isotropic phase transition process, which is the most important
actuation moment. Here, we report an interpenetrating liquid-crystal
polyurethane/polyacrylate elastomer material, consisting of one main-chain
polyurethane LCE and another liquid-crystal polyacrylate thermoset
network, which are simultaneously polymerized. This two-way shape
memory material can reversibly shrink/expand under thermal stimulus
and show ultrastrong actuation–mechanics properties. With a
maximum shrinkage ratio of 86% at 140 °C, which is beyond the
LC-to-isotropic phase transition, its actuation blocking stress, actuation
work capacity, breaking strength, and elastic modulus reach 2.53 MPa,
1267.7 kJ/m3, 7.9 MPa, and 10.4 MPa, respectively. Such
LCE material can lift up a load 30 000 times heavier than its
own weight. We hope the outstanding mechanical properties of this
interpenetrating polymer network-LCE material would pave the way for
real industrial utilizations of LCE-based soft actuators.