1. Bistable and photoswitchable states of matter
- Author
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Hannah M. Coley, Chern-Hooi Lim, Yifu Ding, Matthew K. McBride, Chen Wang, Charles B. Musgrave, Christopher N. Bowman, Sudheendran Mavila, Gayla Berg Lyon, Lewis M. Cox, and Brady T. Worrell
- Subjects
Materials science ,Bistability ,Stimuli responsive ,Science ,Solid-state ,General Physics and Astronomy ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,lcsh:Science ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Multidisciplinary ,General Chemistry ,Polymer ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Publisher Correction ,0104 chemical sciences ,Temperature and pressure ,chemistry ,Chemical physics ,State of matter ,lcsh:Q ,0210 nano-technology ,Versa - Abstract
Classical materials readily switch phases (solid to fluid or fluid to gas) upon changes in pressure or heat; however, subsequent reversion of the stimulus returns the material to their original phase. Covalently cross-linked polymer networks, which are solids that do not flow when strained, do not change phase even upon changes in temperature and pressure. However, upon the addition of dynamic cross-links, they become stimuli responsive, capable of switching phase from solid to fluid, but quickly returning to the solid state once the stimulus is removed. Reported here is the first material capable of a bistable switching of phase. A permanent solid to fluid transition or vice versa is demonstrated at room temperature, with inherent, spatiotemporal control over this switch in either direction triggered by exposure to light., Polymers cross-linked with dynamic bonds can switch the phase from solid to fluid upon stimulus but return quickly to the solid state once the stimulus is removed. Here the authors report a light triggered permanent solid to fluid transition at room temperature with inherent spatiotemporal control in either direction
- Published
- 2018