Chemistry World Podcast – October 2012
1 October 2012 Podcast | Monthly
Chemistry World Podcast – October 2012

The hydrogel can be stretched to 20 times its original length without breaking Jeong-Yun Sun
Most hydrogels are brittle and not easily stretched. For this reason, hydrogels haven’t traditionally been considered as structural materials. But the fact they can encapsulate organic polymers makes them more suitable than, for instance, metals for interfacing with cells and tissues. In recent decades, researchers have begun trying to improve the properties of hydrogels in the hope of creating stronger, tougher, biocompatible materials.
A landmark was reached in 2003 when a Japanese team reported2 making a hydrogel with a fracture energy – a measure of resistance to fracturing or ‘toughness’ – of more than 1000Jm-2, similar to natural cartilage. Zhigang Suo at Harvard University and his team have now unveiled a gel with a fracture energy of around 9000Jm-2, meaning it’s almost as hard to break as rubber. ‘The moment we put the material together, its behaviour was just spectacular – even without detailed measurement, just playing with it in your hands,’ says Suo. ‘The material property is orders of magnitude better than other reported values.’
‘It’s a very elegant idea,’ says Vitaliy Khutoryanskiy, a materials scientist at the University of Reading, UK. ‘They’ve used very simple chemistry but achieved fantastic results.’ The team’s approach is one that could be used as a guiding principle for making other more durable hydrogels, he adds.
Hydrogels are already used in contact lenses, drug delivery and tissue scaffolds, so Suo is sure tougher hydrogels will have ‘numerous applications’. ‘The biggest application people talk about is cartilage replacement,’ he says. ‘At the moment, there isn’t really any cartilage replacement – you have to replace your knee with metal.’ But he won’t yet suggest that his material could provide a cartilage replacement, as characteristics such as biocompatibility still have to be considered.
1 October 2012 Podcast | Monthly
Chemistry World Podcast – October 2012
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