TY - JOUR
T1 - Bimorph Silk Microsheets with Programmable Actuating Behavior
T2 - Experimental Analysis and Computer Simulations
AU - Ye, Chunhong
AU - Nikolov, Svetoslav V.
AU - Geryak, Ren D.
AU - Calabrese, Rossella
AU - Ankner, John F.
AU - Alexeev, Alexander
AU - Kaplan, David L.
AU - Tsukruk, Vladimir V.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2016/7/13
Y1 - 2016/7/13
N2 - Microscaled self-rolling construct sheets from silk protein material have been fabricated, containing a silk bimorph composed of silk ionomers as an active layer and cross-linked silk β-sheet as the passive layer. The programmable morphology was experimentally explored along with a computational simulation to understand the mechanism of shape reconfiguration. The neutron reflectivity shows that the active silk ionomers layer undergoes remarkable swelling (eight times increase in thickness) after deprotonation while the passive silk β-sheet retains constant volume under the same conditions and supports the bimorph construct. This selective swelling within the silk-on-silk bimorph microsheets generates strong interfacial stress between layers and out-of-plane forces, which trigger autonomous self-rolling into various 3D constructs such as cylindrical and helical tubules. The experimental observations and computational modeling confirmed the role of interfacial stresses and allow programming the morphology of the 3D constructs with particular design. We demonstrated that the biaxial stress distribution over the 2D planar films depends upon the lateral dimensions, thickness and the aspect ratio of the microsheets. The results allow the fine-tuning of autonomous shape transformations for the further design of complex micro-origami constructs and the silk based rolling/unrolling structures provide a promising platform for polymer-based biomimetic devices for implant applications.
AB - Microscaled self-rolling construct sheets from silk protein material have been fabricated, containing a silk bimorph composed of silk ionomers as an active layer and cross-linked silk β-sheet as the passive layer. The programmable morphology was experimentally explored along with a computational simulation to understand the mechanism of shape reconfiguration. The neutron reflectivity shows that the active silk ionomers layer undergoes remarkable swelling (eight times increase in thickness) after deprotonation while the passive silk β-sheet retains constant volume under the same conditions and supports the bimorph construct. This selective swelling within the silk-on-silk bimorph microsheets generates strong interfacial stress between layers and out-of-plane forces, which trigger autonomous self-rolling into various 3D constructs such as cylindrical and helical tubules. The experimental observations and computational modeling confirmed the role of interfacial stresses and allow programming the morphology of the 3D constructs with particular design. We demonstrated that the biaxial stress distribution over the 2D planar films depends upon the lateral dimensions, thickness and the aspect ratio of the microsheets. The results allow the fine-tuning of autonomous shape transformations for the further design of complex micro-origami constructs and the silk based rolling/unrolling structures provide a promising platform for polymer-based biomimetic devices for implant applications.
KW - LbL assembly
KW - microfabricated biopolymers
KW - neutron reflectivity
KW - responsive biomaterials
KW - silk micro-origami
KW - theoretical simulation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84978389119&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acsami.6b05156
DO - 10.1021/acsami.6b05156
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84978389119
SN - 1944-8244
VL - 8
SP - 17694
EP - 17706
JO - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
JF - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
IS - 27
ER -