Abstract

Mimicking the anisotropic structure and environmental adaptation of organisms in nature remains a key objective in the field of hydrogels. However, it has been very challenging due to complex fabrication and confined application only in water. Here, we demonstrate a new strategy of spontaneous fabrication of an anisotropic hydrogel based on our finding in the tropic movement of gelatin toward the Teflon template. The obtained hydrogel exhibits fast response and recovery under temperature stimuli both in aqueous and non-aqueous environments, making use of the approximate transition temperature and opposite phase transition behavior of gelatin and poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAm). Its recovery performance in water is more than 50 times faster than that of the PNIPAm hydrogel. Furthermore, the PNIPAm/gelatin hydrogel can achieve 3D complex deformations, stealth deformation, erasable and reprogrammed surface patterning, and multistage encryption by simply modulating the location and shape of gelatin to achieve an anisotropic structure. The work provides a simple and versatile way to obtain an anisotropic hydrogel with a definite and predictable structure, which is demonstrated across a range of different monomers. It improves the responsive performance and broadens the hydrogel application to the non-aqueous environment. Additionally, this tropic movement of gelatin can be extended for the design of new types of anisotropic materials and thus endows the materials with diverse functionality.

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