Abstract

Responsive materials, as well as active structural systems, are nowadays widely used to develop unprecedented smart devices, sensors or actuators; their functionalities come from the ability of responding to environmental stimuli with a detectable reaction. Depending on the responsive material under study, the triggering stimuli can have a different nature, ranging from physical (temperature, light, electric or magnetic field, mechanical stress, ...), chemical (pH, ligands, …), or biological (enzymes, …) type. Such a responsiveness can be obtained by properly designing the meso- or macroscopic arrangement of the constitutive elements, as occurs in metamaterials, or can be obtained by using responsive materials per se, whose responsiveness comes from the chemistry underneath their microstructure. In fact, when the responsiveness at the molecular level is properly organized, the nanoscale response can be collectively detected at the macroscale, leading to a responsive material. In the present paper, we review the huge world of responsive polymers, by outlining the main features, characteristics and responsive mechanisms of smart polymers and by providing a mechanical modeling perspective, both at the molecular as well as at the continuum scale level. We aim at providing a comprehensive overview of the main features and modeling aspects of the most diffused smart polymers. The quantitative mechanical description of active materials plays a key role in their development and use, enabling the design of advanced devices as well as to engineer the materials’ microstructure according to the desired functionality.

Highlights

  • A great interest in smart and responsive materials has emerged in recent years

  • Responsive materials, as well as active structural systems, are today widely used to develop unprecedented smart devices, sensors, or actuators; their functionalities come from the ability to respond with a detectable reaction to environmental stimuli

  • Depending on the responsive material under study, the triggering stimuli can have a different nature, ranging from physical, chemical, or biological type. Such a responsiveness can be obtained by properly designing the meso- or macroscopic arrangement of the constitutive elements, as occurs in metamaterials, or can be obtained by using responsive materials per se, whose responsiveness comes from the chemistry underneath their microstructure

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Summary

Introduction

A great interest in smart and responsive materials has emerged in recent years. The materials’ capability to develop autonomous functions or to provide a desired response to external actions has been recognized to be of paramount importance for the development of active devices, sensors, and actuators to be applied in advanced fields, especially those devoted to small-scale applications (Roy et al, 2010; Stuart et al, 2010; Wei et al, 2017). Section Swelling-Driven Response of Gels, focuses on hydrogels, in which the polymer network is able to absorb large amounts of solvent, triggering significant volume change (Masao, 2009). The mechanical response of a polymer originates from the elastic energy stored in the network chains due to deformation.

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