Synergistic voltaglue adhesive mechanisms with alternating electric fields

Voltage-activated adhesion is a relatively new discovery that relies on direct currents for initiation of cross-linking. Previous investigations have found that direct currents are linearly correlated to the migration rates of electrocuring, but this is limited by high voltages exceeding 100 V with...

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Main Authors: Singh, Manisha, Yin, Cheong See, Page, Samuel J., Liu, Yuqing, Wicaksono, Gautama, Pujar, Rajashekhar, Choudhary, Shyam Kumar, Kulkarni, Giridhar U., Chen, Jun, Hanna, John V., Webster, Richard David, Steele, Terry W. J.
Other Authors: School of Materials Science and Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142878
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1428782023-07-14T15:59:53Z Synergistic voltaglue adhesive mechanisms with alternating electric fields Singh, Manisha Yin, Cheong See Page, Samuel J. Liu, Yuqing Wicaksono, Gautama Pujar, Rajashekhar Choudhary, Shyam Kumar Kulkarni, Giridhar U. Chen, Jun Hanna, John V. Webster, Richard David Steele, Terry W. J. School of Materials Science and Engineering School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences Interdisciplinary Graduate School (IGS) NTU-Northwestern Institute for Nanomedicine Engineering::Materials Voltaglue Adhesion Voltage-activated adhesion is a relatively new discovery that relies on direct currents for initiation of cross-linking. Previous investigations have found that direct currents are linearly correlated to the migration rates of electrocuring, but this is limited by high voltages exceeding 100 V with instances of incomplete curing of voltage-activated adhesives on semiconducting substrates. Practical applications of electrocuring would benefit from lower voltages to mitigate high-voltage risks, especially with regard to potential medical applications. Alternative electrocuring strategies based on alternating current (AC), electrolyte ionic radius, and temperature are evaluated herein. Square-waveform AC electric field is hypothesized to initiate a two-sided curing progression of voltage-activated adhesive (PAMAM-g-diazirine, aka Voltaglue), where initiation occurs at the cathode terminal. Structure–activity relationships of Voltaglue as a function of AC frequency at currents of 1–3 mA are evaluated against direct currents, migration rate, storage modulus, and lap-shear adhesion on ex vivo tissue mimics. Numerous improvements in electrocuring are observed with AC stimulation vs direct current, including a 35% decrease in maximum voltage, 180% improvement in kinetic rates, and 100% increase in lap-shear adhesion at 2 mA. Li+ ion electrolytes and curing at 4 °C shifts curing kinetics by +104% and −22% respectively, with respect to the control ion (Na+ ion at 24 °C), suggesting that electrolyte migration is the rate-limiting step. Li+ ion electrolytes and curing at 50 °C improve storage modulus by 110% and 470%, respectively. Further evaluations of electrocured matrices with 19F NMR, solid-state NMR, and infrared spectroscopy provide insights into the probable cross-linking mechanisms. ASTAR (Agency for Sci., Tech. and Research, S’pore) MOE (Min. of Education, S’pore) Accepted version 2020-07-06T08:45:29Z 2020-07-06T08:45:29Z 2020 Journal Article Singh, M., Yin, C. S., Page, S. J., Liu, Y., Wicaksono, G., Pujar, R., . . . Steele, T. W. J. (2020). Synergistic voltaglue adhesive mechanisms with alternating electric fields. Chemistry of Materials, 32(6), 2440-2449. doi:10.1021/acs.chemmater.9b04962 0897-4756 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142878 10.1021/acs.chemmater.9b04962 6 32 2440 2449 en Chemistry of Materials This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in Chemistry of Materials, copyright © American Chemical Society after peer review and technical editing by the publisher. To access the final edited and published work see https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemmater.9b04962 application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Materials
Voltaglue
Adhesion
spellingShingle Engineering::Materials
Voltaglue
Adhesion
Singh, Manisha
Yin, Cheong See
Page, Samuel J.
Liu, Yuqing
Wicaksono, Gautama
Pujar, Rajashekhar
Choudhary, Shyam Kumar
Kulkarni, Giridhar U.
Chen, Jun
Hanna, John V.
Webster, Richard David
Steele, Terry W. J.
Synergistic voltaglue adhesive mechanisms with alternating electric fields
description Voltage-activated adhesion is a relatively new discovery that relies on direct currents for initiation of cross-linking. Previous investigations have found that direct currents are linearly correlated to the migration rates of electrocuring, but this is limited by high voltages exceeding 100 V with instances of incomplete curing of voltage-activated adhesives on semiconducting substrates. Practical applications of electrocuring would benefit from lower voltages to mitigate high-voltage risks, especially with regard to potential medical applications. Alternative electrocuring strategies based on alternating current (AC), electrolyte ionic radius, and temperature are evaluated herein. Square-waveform AC electric field is hypothesized to initiate a two-sided curing progression of voltage-activated adhesive (PAMAM-g-diazirine, aka Voltaglue), where initiation occurs at the cathode terminal. Structure–activity relationships of Voltaglue as a function of AC frequency at currents of 1–3 mA are evaluated against direct currents, migration rate, storage modulus, and lap-shear adhesion on ex vivo tissue mimics. Numerous improvements in electrocuring are observed with AC stimulation vs direct current, including a 35% decrease in maximum voltage, 180% improvement in kinetic rates, and 100% increase in lap-shear adhesion at 2 mA. Li+ ion electrolytes and curing at 4 °C shifts curing kinetics by +104% and −22% respectively, with respect to the control ion (Na+ ion at 24 °C), suggesting that electrolyte migration is the rate-limiting step. Li+ ion electrolytes and curing at 50 °C improve storage modulus by 110% and 470%, respectively. Further evaluations of electrocured matrices with 19F NMR, solid-state NMR, and infrared spectroscopy provide insights into the probable cross-linking mechanisms.
author2 School of Materials Science and Engineering
author_facet School of Materials Science and Engineering
Singh, Manisha
Yin, Cheong See
Page, Samuel J.
Liu, Yuqing
Wicaksono, Gautama
Pujar, Rajashekhar
Choudhary, Shyam Kumar
Kulkarni, Giridhar U.
Chen, Jun
Hanna, John V.
Webster, Richard David
Steele, Terry W. J.
format Article
author Singh, Manisha
Yin, Cheong See
Page, Samuel J.
Liu, Yuqing
Wicaksono, Gautama
Pujar, Rajashekhar
Choudhary, Shyam Kumar
Kulkarni, Giridhar U.
Chen, Jun
Hanna, John V.
Webster, Richard David
Steele, Terry W. J.
author_sort Singh, Manisha
title Synergistic voltaglue adhesive mechanisms with alternating electric fields
title_short Synergistic voltaglue adhesive mechanisms with alternating electric fields
title_full Synergistic voltaglue adhesive mechanisms with alternating electric fields
title_fullStr Synergistic voltaglue adhesive mechanisms with alternating electric fields
title_full_unstemmed Synergistic voltaglue adhesive mechanisms with alternating electric fields
title_sort synergistic voltaglue adhesive mechanisms with alternating electric fields
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142878
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