Pluralizing actuation behavior of 3D printable liquid crystal elastomers via polymerization sequence control

Author:

Peng Wenjun12ORCID,Zhao Pengxin12ORCID,Zhou Xiaorui3,Liang Xin12ORCID,Zhang Xianming12ORCID,Jin Binjie34ORCID,Chen Guancong3ORCID,Zhao Qian3ORCID,Xie Tao3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Engineering Laboratory for Textile Fiber Materials and Processing Technology (Zhejiang), School of Materials Science and Engineering, Zhejiang Sci-Tech University, Hangzhou 310018, China.

2. Zhejiang Provincial Innovation Center of Advanced Textile Technology, Shaoxing 312000, China.

3. State Key Laboratory of Chemical Engineering, College of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310027, China.

4. Institute of Emergent Elastomers, School of Materials Science and Engineering, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou 510640, China.

Abstract

Mechanical stretching is commonly used for mesogen alignment which is essential for the muscle-like actuations of liquid crystal elastomers (LCEs). Despite the simplicity of the method, the mesogens are typically aligned in the stretching direction, limiting exclusively the LCE to an actuation mode of cooling-induced elongation. Here, we design an interpenetrating double network consisting of an LCE network and an elastomer network, with one polymerized network stretched before the polymerization of the other network. Depending on the polymerization sequence of the two networks, the double network shows two opposite actuation modes, namely, the conventional cooling-induced elongation or an unusual cooling-induced contraction. Strategic integration of the two opposite behaviors into the same LCE leads to sophisticated actuation difficult to achieve with a conventional LCE design. Coupled with 3D printing, geometrically complexed LCEs with diverse multimodal four-dimensional actuation behaviors are illustrated. Our work expands the design scope of LCE actuators and their potential device applications.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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