Humidity responsive tripeptide crystals

Autor: Piotrowska, Roxana, Hesketh, Travis, Wang, Haozhen, Martin, Alan R. G., Bowering, Deborah, Zhang, Chunqiu, Hu, Chunhua T., McPhee, Scott, Wang, Tong, Park, Yaewon, Singla, Pulkit, McGlone, Thomas, Florence, Alastair, Tuttle, Tell, Ulijn, Rein V., Chen, Xi
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
Zdroj: Virtual Symposium: Systems Chemistry
Popis: Water-responsive materials undergo reversible shape changes upon varying humidity levels. These mechanically tough, yet flexible structures can exert significant forces and hold promise as efficient actuators for energy harvesting, adaptive materials, and soft robotics. Using nanoporous tripeptide crystals, we demonstrate that energy transfer during evaporation-induced actuation results from strengthening of water H-bonding that drives the contraction of the pores. The seamless integration of mobile and structurally bound water inside these pores with a supramolecular network which contains readily deformable aromatic domains, translates dehydration-induced mechanical stresses through the crystal lattice, suggesting a general mechanism of efficient water-responsive actuation. The observed strengthening of water bonding complements accepted understanding of capillary force induced reversible contraction for this class of materials. These minimalistic peptide crystals are much simpler in composition compared to natural water-responsive materials, and the insights provided here can be applied more generally for the design of high-energy molecular actuators. Poster presented at the 2020 Virtual Systems Chemistry Symposium, Advanced Science Research Center, City University of New York, New York, USA.
This work was supported in part by The Office of Naval Research (ONR) (N00014-18-1-2492), the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR) (FA9550-19-1-0111), the EPSRC-funded ARCHIE-WeSt High Performance Computer (www.archie-west.ac.uk) for computational resource via EPSRC grant no. EP/K000586/1, and the CUNY/ Strathclyde partnership. C.T.H. acknowledges the support of the National Science Foundation (NSF) Chemistry Research Instrumentation and Facilities Program (CHE-0840277) and Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC) Program (DMR-1420073).
Databáze: OpenAIRE