Thursday, September 13, 2012

Tough, super-stretchy gel could make better implants

Tough, super-stretchy gel could make better implants - tech - 06 September 2012 - New Scientist@import "/css/gridmain.css"; @import "/css/article.css";@import "/css/comlist.css";@import "/data/images/ns/haas/haas.css";/* specific to this article view */#maincol {border-top:solid #A7A7A7 1px; padding-top:15px;}/* Basic commenting CSS*/.combx {margin:10px 0 0 0;padding:10px 20px 10px 10px;}#compnl {border-top:solid #A7A7A7 1px;}/* comment styles for article page only *//* form styles */#comform {margin:20px 50px 20px 10px;}#comform label{width: 90px;text-align: right;}#comform div.userhelp {margin:0 0 2px 115px;}#comform input.textinput, #comform textarea {width:300px;}#comform div.floatclear, #comformlogin div.floatclear {margin-bottom:10px;}#comform input#comcancel{margin:0 10px 0 0;}#comform input#compreview{margin:0 10px 0 0;}#comform textarea {height:95px;}#comformlogin {margin:20px 100px 20px 100px;}#comformlogin label{width: 120px;}#comformlogin input.textinput {width:150px;}#snv_tech a {background: url('/img/bg/snv_tech.jpg') no-repeat; color:#fff;}/* article social media */#sharebtns {width:440px; margin-left:10px; margin-bottom:20px; padding:15px 0 15px 10px; background:#F2F2F2;}#sharebtns div.floatleft {margin-right:10px;}#sharebtns .stumble {margin-top:1px;}.grpTools img {margin-right:8px; margin-top:9px;}#fblike {margin-top:41px;} Subscribe nowNew ScientistTech    Log in

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Tough, super-stretchy gel could make better implants06 September 2012Magazine issue 2881. Subscribe and save LOOK out, Mr Fantastic: there's a new creation in town that is super-stretchy and ultra-strong, despite being 90 per cent water.

The material is a hydrogel, an artificial substance that has similar properties to many tissues in the human body. Familiar to many as soft contact lenses, hydrogels have also been used as wound dressings or cartilage replacement.

There is a limiting factor: "Most hydrogels are brittle, like tofu or Jell-O," says Zhigang Suo of Harvard University. "To be used in the body, hydrogels have to be flexible and tough."

Suo and colleagues created their substance by mixing two polymers each crosslinked with different types of chemical bonds. The resulting hybrid gel can stretch to more than 20 times its original length and still bounce back into shape (Nature, doi: 10.1038/nature11409).

Other hydrogels have been made about as stretchy, but they rip easily if they suffer small tears.

"It's like the rubber of a balloon," says Suo. "If you cut a small hole in it and then try to stretch it, the hole will get bigger and the rubber will break."

Even when slightly torn, the new gel can stretch to around 17 times its original length before it tears. The team thinks this toughness may be due to the gel's hybrid nature.

Costantino Creton at ESPCI ParisTech in France, says the hydrogel has the best balance of properties yet, as well as being easy to make: "It shows promise where you need something soft and flexible but also durable."

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printsendTaking the strain <i>(Image: Jeong-Yun Sun)</i>Taking the strain (Image: Jeong-Yun Sun)

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