Abstract

Adhesion between similar and dissimilar materials is essential to many biological systems and synthetic materials, devices, and machines. Since the inception of adhesion science more than five decades ago, adhesion to a surface has long been recognized as beyond two-dimensional. Similarly, molecular conformation - the three-dimensional arrangement of atoms in a molecule - is ubiquitous in biology and fundamental to the binding of biomolecules. However, the connection between these concepts, which could link molecular conformation in biology to micro- and macroscopic adhesion in materials science, remains elusive. Herein, we examine this connection by manipulating the molecular conformation of a mussel-inspired universal coating, which imparts a memory for recognizing different hydrogels. This approach leads to significantly (several fold) increased interfacial adhesion between the coating and hydrogels across a broad range of length scales, from molecular to macroscopic. Furthermore, we demonstrate that imparting memory is a general and facile noncovalent approach for enhancing interfacial adhesion that, with suitable energy dissipation, can be used for the bonding of materials.

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