Liquid-Crystalline Soft Actuators with Switchable Thermal Reprogrammability

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2020 Mar 16;59(12):4778-4784. doi: 10.1002/anie.201915694. Epub 2020 Feb 4.

Abstract

Thermal reprogrammability is essential for new-generation large dry soft actuators, but the realization sacrifices the favored actuation performance. The contradiction between thermal reprogrammability and stability hampers efforts to design high-performance soft actuators to be robust and thermally adaptable. Now, a strategy has been developed that relies on repeatedly switching on/off thermal reprogrammability in liquid-crystalline elastomer (LCE) actuators to resolve this problem. By post-synthesis swelling, a latent siloxane exchange reaction can be induced in the common siloxane LCEs (switching on), enabling reprogramming into on-demand 3D-shaped actuators; by switching off the dynamic network by heating, actuation stability is guaranteed even at high temperature (180 °C). Using partially black-ink-patterned LCEs, selectively switching off reprogrammability allows integration of completely different actuation modes in one monolithic actuator for more delicate and elaborate tasks.

Keywords: dynamic siloxane exchange; elastomers; liquid crystals; soft actuators; switchable thermal reprogrammability.