Abstract

Developing adhesives suitable for underwater environments remains a formidable challenge due to the barrier presented by water, hindering contact between the adhesive and adherend. In this work, supramolecular adhesives prepared by mixing low and high molecular weight poly(butyl acrylate)-based copolymers are manifested to function effectively for underwater adhesion regardless of substrates’ affinity to water. Optimization of adhesion performance is achieved by manipulating the copolymer composition, resulting in the remarkable adhesion strengths of 1290 N m-1 and 1047 N m-1 to hydrophobic PET and hydrophilic glass substrates, respectively. The observed high underwater adhesion is attributed to a synergistic effect: instant and efficient removal of the hydration layer facilitated by the low molecular weight polymer strands, and mechanical resilience conferred by the high molecular weight strands featured by chain entanglements. Adequate interfacial interactions are attained by the supramolecular interactions including cation-π and π-π bonding. Notably, owing to its inherent hydrophobicity, the adhesive can be stored underwater for over a week and still displays 842 N m-1 peel strength to glass substrate. This work unlocks the potential of supramolecular adhesives with bimodal molecular weight distribution for instant and strong underwater adhesion, providing a straightforward yet scalable strategy to produce high-performance underwater adhesives.

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