Dr. Zhang Hanyue, a young faculty member
from the School of Biological Science and Medical Engineering, SEU, in
collaboration with Prof. Xiong Ren’gen, published
a perspective paper entitled “Ferroelectric polymers take a step toward
bioelectronics” in Science (Science 2023, 381, 540-544). This
publication is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China,
the Start-up Cultivation Fund of “SEU Top 10 Scientific and Technological
Issues”, and the independent programs of Jiangsu Key Laboratory for
Biomaterials and Devices. Guided by Prof. Xiong Ren’gen, a pioneer in ferroelectric
chemistry, the authors reviewed and discussed the intrinsic
elasticity achieved in P(VDF-TrFE)-based flexible ferroelectric polymers in
combination with recent progress gained in the field of ferroelectric
chemistry. Zhang Hanyue is both the first author and corresponding author of
the paper, with SEU listed as the first corresponding institute.
Ferroelectric material, as an important
functional material, holds significant implications across various sectors,
including national defense, aerospace, information technology, energy, and
healthcare, among others. With the progress of this era, there have been greater
demands and higher expectations for electronic devices. To fulfill the evolving
requisites of bioelectronics applications such as soft robots, health
monitoring devices, and wearable electronics, ferroelectric materials are
supposed to be soft and flexible, possessing excellent elasticity. These
requirements have posed substantial challenges for conventional ferroelectric
materials which inherently tend to be rigid and brittle, such as inorganic
oxides and ion crystals. Despite their favorable mechanical flexibility,
ferroelectric polymers, exemplified by polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) and its
copolymers, often exhibit irreversible plastic deformation.
This paper introduces rubber, one of the
most common elastic materials in our daily life, which is generally an
amorphous polymer featuring lower glass-transition temperature. To realize effective
elastic recovery, polymer materials should feature lower crystallinity.
However, ferroelectricity is commonly observed in crystalline compounds, where
long-range ordered polar structures are crucial for ferroelectricity. From this
aspect, chemical cross-linking is a common and straightforward method to
achieve intrinsic elasticity. However, traditional chemical cross-linking may
significantly reduce the crystallinity of the polymer, leading to a weakened
ferroelectric response. Therefore, the challenge of achieving both excellent
ferroelectricity and high resilience in a single material has been considered
as a significant hurdle in the development of ferroelectric materials for over
a century.
The paper further elaborated on the research
published in the same issue of Science, which concentrated on achieving the
intrinsic elasticity in P(VDF-TrFE)-based ferroelectric polymer through
chemical modification. Gao et al. proposed a chemical cross-linking method with
an exceedingly low cross-linking density (1-2%) to achieve the elasticity in
the plastic P(VDF-TrFE)-based polymers (as depicted in the figure below). Their
investigation revealed that the copolymer of P(VDF-TrFE) with a VDF molar
fraction of 55% exhibited the lowest modulus and the highest elongation at
break. Consequently, they chemically modified the P(VDF-TrFE)-based plastic
polymer with this specific composition. By using a soft long-chain
cross-linking agent, polyethylene glycol (PEG) diamine, they partially
cross-linked the P(VDF-TrFE)-based plastic polymer chains (the optimal
cross-linking density of 1.44%), thus forming an elastic cross-linked network. Such
modification has endowed the P(VDF-TrFE)-based polymer with ideal resilience
while retaining high crystallinity for sound ferroelectric performance. The
resulting elastic ferroelectric polymer exhibited excellent elastic strain
recovery, up to 125%. It is particularly noteworthy that, the chemically
modified elastic ferroelectric polymer, even under 70% strain, still displayed
a clear ferroelectric hysteresis loop, indicating that it still maintained sound
ferroelectric bi-stability under stress and tension.
The conclusion of the paper highlighted the
promising prospect of incorporating the single chiral strategy into
ferroelectric chemical design, which opens up a wealth of possibilities for the
future development of elastic ferroelectric materials. The introduction of single
chirality is one of important principles within ferroelectric chemical theory,
as proposed by Prof. Xiong Ren’gen, for the design of molecular ferroelectrics.
Introducing the chiral monomers into polymers or using chiral cross-linking
agents to modify polymers can transmit the asymmetry caused by single chirality
to the molecular structure layer by layer. This is vital for the construction
of electrically active ferroelectric polymers. At the same time, the chirality
will also endow ferroelectric polymers with new functional properties, such as
chiroptical properties and catalytic enantioselectivity etc. Taking into account
the recent advancements in the field of ferroelectric chemistry, this perspective
paper also envisions the profound potential of elastic ferroelectric materials
in biomedical applications. In the future, elastic ferroelectric materials will
emerge as an important research trajectory in the field of ferroelectricity.
Dr. Zhang Hanyue is currently working at Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Biomedical Materials and Devices, SEU. Her research focuses on the chemical design of molecular ferroelectric materials and their biomedical applications, with a particular emphasis on organic silicon-based ferroelectric materials. She aims to conduct interdisciplinary research in ferroelectric chemistry and biomedical applications to address biomedical challenges. Since starting her independent work, Dr. Zhang has published her research findings in prestigious international journals, including Science, Physical Review Letters, Journal of the American Chemical Society, Angewandte Chemie International Editionetc.
The paper’s link: https://www.science.org/doi/full/10.1126/science.adj2420
Translated by: Melody Zhang
Reviewed by: Ma Xingcheng
Edited by: Kong Haoxuan
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