| Hydrogel is a network of polymer chains that are hydrophilic, sometimes found as colloidal gel in which water is the dispersion  medium. Hydrogels are highly absorbent (they can contain over 90% water) natural  or synthetic polymeric networks. Hydrogels also possess a degree of flexibility  very similar to natural tissue, due to their significant water content. As per  Wikipedia, common uses for hydrogels include: 
  Scaffolds in tissue  engineering. When used as scaffolds, hydrogels may contain human cells to  repair tissue. As sustained-release drug delivery systems.Provide absorption, desloughing and debriding of necrotic and fibrotic  tissue.Used as biosensors - those hydrogels that are responsive to specific  molecules, such as glucose or antigens.used in disposable diapers where  they absorb urine, in female hygiene products. Contact lensesRectal drug delivery and diagnosis Hydrogels  can reversibly change their size and shape under different conditions. This  property makes them attractive for a wide variety of applications, including  artificial muscles, drug delivery and sensors. But even though  stimuli-sensitive hydrogels have been studied for a few decades, they have not yet  been commercialized for applications. One of the biggest problems is that they  are usually weak and brittle, causing them to easily break when stretched, as  per phys.org.  As per a study published in Nature  Communications, researchers at Nagoya University and The University of  Tokyo have designed hydrogels with temperature and pH sensitivities that are  extremely stretchable as well as mechanically strong. The improvements mark an  important step toward enabling hydrogels to reach their full commercial  potential.Many previous attempts have been made to  improve the strength of hydrogels by modifying the polymer structure, but doing  so often alters the stimuli sensitivities, as well.
 The  new hydrogel structure  was inspired by recent research on a 'slide-ring gel' in which  molecules can slide through the holes in a figure-8-shaped junction of  cross-linked polymers. This sliding is called the 'pulley effect'. By  minimizing the stress on the polymer network, the pulley effect greatly  strengthens the hydrogel. Here, the researchers prepared a hydrogel with  materials chosen specifically to exploit the pulley effect. They also  introduced ionic sites in the polymer network, which increases stretchability  and can be spatially distributed to regulate the pH dependence of the  hydrogel's temperature response. The resulting hydrogels exhibit many  remarkable properties. They can be stressed, compressed, coiled, and knotted  without breaking. The strong hydrogels also cannot be easily cut with a sharp  knife. In addition, they can absorb large amounts of water, becoming 620 times  heavier and gaining a much larger volume when placed in water.
 The results demonstrate that making relatively minor modifications to the hydrogel  polymer network can result in dramatic changes in its chemical properties. The  preparation method is simple and general, allowing it to be applied to a wide  variety of applications. 'Now  we are studying the elastomers that do not contain any solvents, using the  Polyrotaxane cross-linkers', Takeoka said. 'I believe that we can  obtain more stretchable elastomers using our cross-linkers.'
 
 Hydrogels could replace damaged cartilage in people or serve as artificial  muscles and nerves for soft, deformable robots. But it is difficult to make the  materials both stiff and tough at the same time; as stiffer hydrogels are  brittle, while those less apt to break are too squishy. A team at Harvard  University has used a substance  derived from seaweed to make a hydrogel that is both stiff as well as tough (ACS Macro Lett 2014), as per Chemical & Engineering  News.
 Joost J Vlassak, Zhigang Suo and their colleagues created the hydrogel by  mixing distilled water and acrylamide, along with two types of naturally  occurring sodium alginate, which comes from the cell walls of brown algae. They  added a combination of calcium sulfate and calcium chloride to act as ionic  cross-linkers in the polymer network. The two alginates had different lengths,  one up to nine times as long as the other. The short-chain alginates produce a  low viscosity mixture, making it easier to pack high concentrations of the  polymer into the hydrogel, which increases the material's stiffness. The  long-chain versions contribute to the gel's toughness. They form long stretches  of cross-links between the other polymers, which can bridge cracks in the  network. Also, these ionic links can unzip to dissipate stress. With the right  proportions of components, the new material can have an elastic modulus, a  measure of stiffness, of approximately 1 megapascal, and a fracture energy, a  measure of toughness, of about 4,000 J/m2. Vlassak says the material  is as stiff as cartilage, but is tougher than the tissue, which has a fracture  energy of 1,000 J/m2.
 The properties of the hydrogel might be tuned further by using different  lengths of alginates, Vlassak says. The range of lengths of naturally occurring  alginates is limited, but hitting them with gamma radiation can produce  different chain lengths.
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