Ionic Electroactive Polymers And Liquid Crystal Elastomers For Applications In Soft Robotics, Energy Harvesting, Sensing And Organic Electrochemical Transistors


Book Description

Over the past few decades, there has been tremendous development on soft materials in soft robotics, energy generation and sensing applications. These soft materials are mostly polymers. Their compliant elasticity, good adaptability to external constraints, and biocompatibility make them suitable for those applications. Further, polymers that respond by changing their shape or size to an external stimulus such as electric field, magnetic field, heat, pressure, pH, and light have great potential for these applications. Among these stimuli responsive materials, electro responsive polymers (electroactive polymers (EAPs)) acquires great attention. Organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs) have attracted great attention since their discovery in 1984 due to their flexibility, biocompatibility, easy fabrication and tunability through synthetic chemistry. As OECTs conduct both electronic and ionic charge, they are suitable for bioelectronic applications, such as recording electric activity of cells and tissues, detection of ions, metabolites, antigens related with various diseases, hormones, DNA, enzymes and neurotransmitter. In my dissertation, I will describe how we developed ionic electroactive polymers (iEAPs) and ionic liquid crystal elastomers (iLCEs) for the applications of soft robotics, energy harvesting (flexo-ionic effect), sensing and organic electrochemical transistors. Firstly, we engineered poly (ethylene glycol) diacrylate based iEAPs for soft robotics application. Here, low voltage induced bending (converse flexoelectricity) of crosslinked poly (ethylene glycol) diacrylate (PEGDA), modified with thiosi-loxane (TS) and ionic liquid (1-hexyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophos-phate) (IL) is studied. In between 2[mu]m PEDOT:PSS electrodes at 1 V, it provides durable (95% retention under 5000 cycles) and relatively fast (2 s switching time) actuation with the second largest strain observed so far in iEAPs. In between 40 nm gold electrodes under 8 V DC voltage, the film can be completely curled up (270° bending angle) with 6% strain that, to the best of the knowledge, is unpreceded among iEAPs. These results render great potential for the TS/PEGDA/IL based electro-active actuators for soft robotic applications. Next, we developed an advanced electroactive anisotropic soft material using liquid crystals elastomers. Anisotropic characteristic of liquid crystals gives an additional degree of freedom than isotropic polymers to design these soft materials by programming the molecular structure. We invented a new class of electroactive material named ionic liquid crystal elastomers (iLCEs), where ionic liquid is incorporated in the polymer matrix. We demonstrated that the iLCEs can be used in mechanoelectrical transconduction (energy harvesting, flexo-ionic effect and bending sensing applications). Piezoelectricity and flexoelectricity are the two major classes of mechanoelectrical transconduction, where electrical current and voltages are generated in response to strain gradient in the latter as opposed to extensional strain in the former. Flexo-ionic effect is a similar phenomenon as flexoelectricity, where ionic polarization results in electric generation due to bending of polymer films. Here, we investigate the molecular alignment dependence of the flexoelectric coefficient and the sensitivity of the iLCEs. The measured flexo-ionic coefficients were found to strongly depend on the director alignment of the iLCE films and can be over 200[mu]C/m. This value is orders of magnitude higher than the flexo-electric coefficient found in insulating liquid crystals and is comparable to the well-developed ionic polymers (iEAPs). The shortest response times, i.e., the largest bandwidth of the flexo-ionic responses, is achieved in planar alignment, when the director is uniformly parallel to the substrates. These results render high potential for iLCE-based devices for applications in sensors and wearable micropower generators. Finally, we developed a substrate free, flexible OECT based on iLCE. We demonstrated that iLCEs can be used as solid electrolytes of OECTs. The precise control of the liquid-crystalline phase of the iLCE provides a means to control and tune the ion flow within the elastomer. Either isotropic films or films with a planar alignment led to higher ionic conductivities compared to a homeotropic or hybrid alignment. The normalized maximum transconductance gm/w of the most sensitive iLCE, was found to be the highest (7 Sm-1) among all solid state-based OECTs. The normalized maximum transconductance gm/w depends on the alignment of the elastomers, and the highest performance was found for isotropic and planar orientation. Similarly, the transient response of OECTs to square voltage pulses applied to the gate electrode is faster for devices with elastomers that provide high ionic conductivity. Switching times are in the few seconds range, which is comparable to previously reported OECTs based on solid electrolytes. iLCEs provide a new materials class that shows promise as electrolytes in OECTs. Furthermore, we characterized this OECT as a bending sensor. Advantages of this sensor are low voltage operation, high sensitivity, ability to sense the direction (i.e., upward or downward/left or right) of bending.




Electroactive Polymers for Robotic Applications


Book Description

This book covers the fundamental properties, modeling, and demonstration of Electroactive polymers in robotic applications. It particularly details artificial muscles and sensors. In addition, the book discusses the properties and uses in robotics applications of ionic polymer–metal composite actuators and dielectric elastomers.




Electroactive Polymers for Robotic Applications


Book Description

This book covers the fundamental properties, modeling, and demonstration of Electroactive polymers in robotic applications. It particularly details artificial muscles and sensors. In addition, the book discusses the properties and uses in robotics applications of ionic polymer–metal composite actuators and dielectric elastomers.




Applications of Electroactive Polymers


Book Description

Electroactive polymers have been the object of increasing academic and industrial interest and in the past ten to fifteen years substantial progress has been achieved in the development and the characterization of this important new class of conducting materials. These materials are usually classified in two large groups, according to the mode of their electric transport. One group includes polymers having transport almost exclusively of the ionic type and they are often called 'polymer electrolytes' or, in a broader way, 'polymer ionics'. The other group includes polymeric materials where the transport mechanism is mainly electronic in nature and which are commonly termed 'conducting polymers'. Ionically conducting polymers or polymer ionics may be typically described as polar macromolecular solids in which one or more of a wide range of salts has been dissolved. The most classic example is the combina tion of poly(ethylene oxide), PEO, and lithium salts, LiX. These PEO-LiX polymer ionics were first described and proposed for applications just over ten years ago. The practical relevance of these new materials was im mediately recognized and in the course of a few years the field expanded tremendously with the involvement of many academic and industrial lab oratories. Following this diversified research activity, the ionic transport mechanism in polymer ionics was soon established and this has led to the development of new host polymers of various types, new salts and advanced polymer architectures which have enabled room temperature conductivity to be raised by several orders of magnitude.




Stimuli-Responsive Nematic Elastomers And Fluids For Electromechanical, Optical And Electro-Optical Applications


Book Description

This dissertation describes stimuli-responsive liquid crystals and elastomers including thermal/electro-active ionic liquid crystal elastomers, UV responsive twist bend nematic liquid crystal dimmers and fast-switching chiral ferroelectric nematic liquid crystals with detailed studies on its nanoscale structures, electrical and optical properties for possible electric, optical and electro-optical applications. In this dissertation, the first preparation, physical properties, and electric bending actuation of a new class of active materials - ionic liquid crystal elastomers (iLCEs) are described. iLCEs can be actuated by low frequency AC or DC voltages of less than 1 V. The bending strains of the not optimized first iLCEs are already comparable to the well-developed ionic electroactive polymers (iEAPs). Additionally, iLCEs exhibit several novel and superior features. For example, pre-programmed actuation can be achived by patterning the substrates with different alignment domains at the level of cross-linking process. Since liquid crystal elastomers are also sensitive to magnetic fields, and can also be light sensitive, in addition to dual (thermal and electric) actuations in hybrid samples, iLCEs have far-reaching potentials toward multi-responsive actuations that may have so far unmatched properties in soft robotics, sensing and biomedical applications. The following two works are the understanding of the structure of the twist-bend nematic (NTB) phase. The first work presents hard and tender resonant X-ray scattering studies of two novel sulfur containing dimer materials for which we simultaneously measure the temperature dependences of the helical pitch and the correlation length of both the helical and positional order. In addition to an unexpected strong variation of the pitch with the length of the spacer connecting the monomer units, we find that at the transition to the NTB phase the positional correlation length drops. In the second work we use tender x-ray scattering to decipher the variation of the pitch and heliconical bond order of a NTB dimer containing azo groups upon polarized light illumination. It shows the first evidence of manipulation of the nanoscale heliconical structure of a twist bend nematic liquid crystal dimer containing an azo linkage by polarized light. The tender X-ray pattern reveals two different heliconical pitch values of aligned and unaligned domains under polarized light. In addition to the bulk alignment, the value of the heliconical pitch can be also tuned in two timescales by UV-violet light and recovered in a temperature dependent time. Then we studied the electrical, optical, and electro-optical properties of a ferroelectric nematic (NF) LC material doped with commercially available chiral dopants. While the NF phase of the undoped LC is only monotropic, the chiral NF phase is enantiotropic, indicating a chirality induced stabilization of the polar nematic order. Compared to undoped NF material, a remarkable improvement of the electro-optical switching time is demonstrated. The color of the chiral mixtures that exhibit a selective reflection of visible light in the chiral NF phase, can be reversibly tuned by 0.02-0.1V/[mu]m in-plane electric fields, which are much smaller than typically required in full-color cholesteric LC displays. The fast switchable reflection color at low fields has potential applications for LC displays without backlight, smart windows, shutters and e-papers. In the end, there are summaries and outlooks of all the results and the future applications.




Electroactive Polymer Electrochemistry


Book Description

The development of "tailormade" electrode surfaces using electroactive polymer films has been one of the most active and exciting areas of electrochemistry over the last 15 years. The properties of these materials have been examined by a wide range of scientists from a variety of perspectives, and now electroactive polymer research is considered to be a reasonably mature area of research endeavor. Much is now understood about the fundamental mechanism of conduction in these materials. A wide range of electrochemical techniques may be used to probe the conductivity processes in these materials, and more recently, a number of in situ spectroscopic techniques have been used to further elucidate the structure of these materials. The in situ spectroscopies and allied techniques have also been used to obtain correlations between structure and redox activity. The applications found for electroactive polymers are many and varied, and range from thin film amperometric chemical and biological sensors, electrocatalytic systems, drug delivery devices, and advanced battery systems through to molecular electronic devices. The research literature on electroactive polymers is truly enormous and can daunt even the most hardened researcher. The vast quantity of material reported in the literature can also intimidate beginning graduate students. Hence the present book. The original idea for this book arose as a result of a series of lectures on chemically modified eiectrodes and electroactive polymers given by the writer to final-year undergraduates at Trinity College Dublin.




Recent advances in the design, fabrication, actuation mechanisms and applications of liquid crystal elastomers


Book Description

Liquid crystal elastomers (LCEs), as an intriguing class of soft active materials, exhibit excellent actuation performances and biocompatible properties, as well as a high degree of design flexibility, which have been of increasing interest in many disciplines. This review summarizes recent developments in this inspiring area, providing an overview of fabrication methods, design schemes, actuation mechanisms, and diverse applications of LCEs. Firstly, two-stage and one-pot synthesis methods, as well as emerging fabrication techniques (e.g., 3D/4D printing and top-down microfabrication techniques) are introduced. Secondly, the design and actuation mechanisms are discussed according to the different types of stimuli (e.g., heat, light, and electric/magnetic fields, among others). Thirdly, the representative applications are summarized, including soft robotics, temperature/strain sensors, biomedical devices, stretchable displays, and smart textiles. Finally, outlooks on the scientific challenges and open opportunities are provided.




Dielectric Elastomers as Electromechanical Transducers


Book Description

Dielectric Elastomers as Electromechanical Transducers provides a comprehensive and updated insight into dielectric elastomers; one of the most promising classes of polymer-based smart materials and technologies. This technology can be used in a very broad range of applications, from robotics and automation to the biomedical field. The need for improved transducer performance has resulted in considerable efforts towards the development of devices relying on materials with intrinsic transduction properties. These materials, often termed as “smart or “intelligent , include improved piezoelectrics and magnetostrictive or shape-memory materials. Emerging electromechanical transduction technologies, based on so-called ElectroActive Polymers (EAP), have gained considerable attention. EAP offer the potential for performance exceeding other smart materials, while retaining the cost and versatility inherent to polymer materials. Within the EAP family, “dielectric elastomers , are of particular interest as they show good overall performance, simplicity of structure and robustness. Dielectric elastomer transducers are rapidly emerging as high-performance “pseudo-muscular actuators, useful for different kinds of tasks. Further, in addition to actuation, dielectric elastomers have also been shown to offer unique possibilities for improved generator and sensing devices. Dielectric elastomer transduction is enabling an enormous range of new applications that were precluded to any other EAP or smart-material technology until recently. This book provides a comprehensive and updated insight into dielectric elastomer transduction, covering all its fundamental aspects. The book deals with transduction principles, basic materials properties, design of efficient device architectures, material and device modelling, along with applications. Concise and comprehensive treatment for practitioners and academics Guides the reader through the latest developments in electroactive-polymer-based technology Designed for ease of use with sections on fundamentals, materials, devices, models and applications




Ionic Polymer Metal Composites (IMPCs)


Book Description

A comprehensive resource on ionic polymer metal composites (IPMCs) edited by the leading authority on the subject.




Biomedical Applications of Electroactive Polymer Actuators


Book Description

Giving fundamental information on one of the most promising families of smart materials, electroactive polymers (EAP) this exciting new titles focuses on the several biomedical applications made possible by these types of materials and their related actuation technologies. Each chapter provides a description of the specific EAP material and device configuration used, material processing, device assembling and testing, along with a description of the biomedical application. Edited by well-respected academics in the field of electroactive polymers with contributions from renowned international experts, this is an excellent resource for industrial and academic research scientists, engineers, technicians and graduate students working with polymer actuators or in the fields of polymer science.