Re-Programming Hydrogel Properties using a Fuel-driven Reaction Cycle

23 December 2019, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Nature uses catalysis as an indispensable tool to control assembly and reaction cycles in vital non-equilibrium supramolecular processes. For instance, enzymatic methionine oxidation regulates actin (dis)assembly, and catalytic guanosine triphosphate hydrolysis is found in tubulin (dis)assembly. Here we present a completely artificial reaction cycle which is driven by a chemical fuel that is catalytically obtained from a ‘pre-fuel’. The reaction cycle controls the disassembly and re-assembly of a hydrogel, where the rate of pre-fuel turnover dictates the morphology as well as the mechanical properties. By adding additional fresh aliquots of fuel and removing waste, the hydrogels can be re-programmed time after time. Overall, we show how catalysis can control fuel generation to control reaction / assembly kinetics and materials properties in life-like non-equilibrium systems.

Keywords

non-equilibrium
self-assembly
dissipative
hydrogel
chemical fuel
fuel-driven supramolecular materials
Fuel-Driven Dissipative Self-Assembly
synerisis
transient self-assembly

Supplementary materials

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Video1 gel-sol-gel vial
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Video2 microscopy
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REV SI SachCHO 20191221 GF v2
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