Joining the Un-Joinable: New polymer linking technology based on nano crystals developed

28-Aug-2012 - Germany

Ever tried to paint on top of silicone? After a few hours, the paint will peel off. Annoying. Silicone is a so-called low surface energy polymer, well known from flexible baking forms: A synthetic material that has an extremely low adhesion or “stickiness”. Teflon is similarly non-sticky and well known from frying pans. Researchers of Kiel University (Germany) have now developed the first technology which is capable of joining these two “unjoinable” materials. The technology applies passive nano-scaled crystal linkers as internal staples. The nano staples open up solutions to a large number of technical challenges, for example in medical engineering. The work carried out within the DFG-funded Collaborative Research Center 677 “Function by Switching” was published in the scientific journal Advanced Materials.

Copyright: CAU, Image: Xin Jin

Every zinc oxide crystal is shaped like a tetrapod: four arms pointing away from a central point. Image from scanning electron microscope.

Copyright: CAU, Image: Xin Jin

The arms of the tetrapod crystal staples interlock with each other forming strong bonds. Image from scanning electron microscope.

Copyright: CAU, Image: Xin Jin

The tetrapod nano staples sink into the polymer, while some of the arms are sticking out. Image from scanning electron microscope.

Copyright: CAU, Image: Xin Jin
Copyright: CAU, Image: Xin Jin
Copyright: CAU, Image: Xin Jin

A new piece of technology

“If the nano staples make even extreme polymers like Teflon and silicone stick to each other, they can join all kinds of other plastic materials”, says Professor Rainer Adelung. Adelung is leading the functional nano materials group at the Institute of Materials Science in Kiel and lead the research project from the materials science side. The new technology of joining materials without chemical modifications can be used, according to Adelung, in a variety of everyday life and high tech applications. The technique is easy to use and does not need expensive equipment or material.

Microscopic staples

The linkers are micro and nano scaled crystals made of zinc oxide. They are shaped like tetrapods, where four legs protrude from the point of origin. Large-scale tetrapods are known for their ability to interlock and form strong bonds, for example in coastal protection.

Stapling from the inside

During the joining process, the zinc oxide crystals are sprinkled evenly onto a heated layer of Teflon. Then, a layer of silicone is poured on top. In order to join the materials firmly, they are then heated to 100°Celsius for less than an hour. “It’s like stapling two non-sticky materials from the inside with the crystals: When they are heated up, the nano tetrapods in between the polymer layers pierce the materials, sink into them, and get anchored”, explains Xin Jin, the first author of the publication, who is currently working on her PhD thesis. Her colleague and supervisor, Dr. Yogendra Kumar Mishra, explains the adhesive principle: “If you try to pull out a tetrapod on one arm from a polymer layer, the shape of the tetrapod will simply cause three arms to dig in deeper and to hold on even firmer.”

Stapling is better than gluing

In high technology businesses such as medical engineering, there is a strong demand for innovative ways to make polymers, particularly silicone, stick to other materials, for example to further develop breathing masks, implants or sensors. Medical applications require materials that are absolutely non-harmful, i.e. biocompatible. Many joining methods involve chemical reactions, which may change the polymers’ properties and can cause injurious or even toxic effects on organisms. The tetrapod stapling, on the contrary, is a purely mechanical process. Therefore the Kiel team assumes it to be biocompatible.

As strong as sticky tape

With the tetrapod staples, the scientists have achieved a stickiness – the so-called peel strength – of 200 Newtons per meter, which is similar to peeling sticky tape off glass. “The stickiness we have achieved with the nano tetrapods is remarkable, because as far as we could verify, no one has ever made silicone and Teflon stick to each other at all”, says co-author Lars Heepe, PhD student from the Zoological Institute of Kiel University, who precisely measured the adhesion and described what the stapled material looks like on the microscopic scale. “Measuring adhesion quantitatively is not as easy as it looks, precise experiments have to be carried out in order to prove the function of the linkers and rule out all errors“, says Professor Stanislav Gorb, leading the group Functional Morphology and Biomechanics.

A joint, interdisciplinary effort

Three research groups from different backgrounds combined their expertise in material science, chemistry and biomechanics in this study within the Collaborative Research Center 677 “Function by Switching” (CRC 677). For Rainer Adelung and his colleagues, this study is not the end of the project: “We are feeding our results directly into both practical applications as well as further fundamental research.” The scientists’ local business partner nanoproofed GmbH is currently developing a product for paintings on top of silicone. In the framework of CRC 677, the staples are the basis for developing biomimetic adhesives, for which adhesion can be switched on and off by light of different colours.

Original publication

X. Jin, J. Strueben, L. Heepe, A. Kovalev, Y.K. Mishra, R. Adelung, S.N. Gorb, A. Staubitz (2012): Joining the un-joinable: Adhesion between low surface energy polymers using tetrapodal ZnO linkers. Advanced Materials

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