A. Indentation results
Indentations of all five compositions were analyzed by first applying the Garcia method for composition 3 (M7.5, R25), as it can be considered the most “standard” composition of the five based on the number of previous literatures surrounding it.38,48,52,56,5738. J. M. Urueña, A. A. Pitenis, R. M. Nixon, K. D. Schulze, T. E. Angelini, and W. Gregory Sawyer, Biotribology 1–2, 24 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biotri.2015.03.00148. A. C. Dunn, J. M. Urueña, Y. Huo, S. S. Perry, T. E. Angelini, and W. G. Sawyer, Tribol. Lett. 49, 371 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11249-012-0076-852. E. P. Chan, Y. Hu, P. M. Johnson, Z. Suo, and C. M. Stafford, Soft Matter 8, 1492 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1039/C1SM06514A56. Y. Hu, X. Zhao, J. J. Vlassak, and Z. Suo, Appl. Phys. Lett. 96, 121904 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.337035457. A. A. Pitenis, J. M. Urueña, K. D. Schulze, R. M. Nixon, A. C. Dunn, B. A. Krick, W. G. Sawyer, and T. E. Angelini, Soft Matter 10, 8955 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1039/C4SM01728E Using the Garcia method, we found that the contact behavior for this composition does not exhibit behavior indicative of a single suitable contact model or a single power-law fit. Immediately after the point of first contact, we observed the greatest variability in the data and any potential exponential fit, with values ranging from 0.3 to 0.8. We predict that this region of variability is due to squeeze-out of the water held by the loose polymer segments, which causes a ramping-up force response due to pressurization of the released water while it escapes the contact. After this initial variability, we could fit a portion of the contact to the Fredrickson high-penetration brush model,58,5958. G. H. Fredrickson, A. Ajdari, L. Leibler, and J. P. Carton, Macromolecules 25, 2882 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1021/ma00037a01559. D. R. Williams, Macromolecules 26, 5096 (1993). https://doi.org/10.1021/ma00071a018 which had n=0.67 (Fig. 6). In this model, the force response is related to the shear modulus of the polymer chains G and their grafting density H [Eq. (7)]. After this interval, the next portion of each indentation curve fits well to a Winkler “bed-of-springs” contact model [see supplementary material, Eq. (2)], suggesting that the compression of the outermost brush segments did not induce significant strain in the material adjacent to it.6060. P. Põdra and S. Andersson, Wear 207, 1–2 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1016/S0043-1648(96)07468-6 Beyond the Winkler-fitting region, we were able to fit a Hertz contact model to the rest of the points, which implies that the compressed gradient-density surface layer had begun to emulate the response of the well-cross-linked bulk. Previous indentations on pAam hydrogels showed that hydrogels molded against glass surfaces exhibited Hertzian contact mechanics,39,52,56,6139. J. M. Urueña, E. O. McGhee, T. E. Angelini, D. Dowson, W. G. Sawyer, and A. A. Pitenis, Biotribology 13, 30 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biotri.2018.01.00252. E. P. Chan, Y. Hu, P. M. Johnson, Z. Suo, and C. M. Stafford, Soft Matter 8, 1492 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1039/C1SM06514A56. Y. Hu, X. Zhao, J. J. Vlassak, and Z. Suo, Appl. Phys. Lett. 96, 121904 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.337035461. A. A. Pitenis and W. G. Sawyer, Tribol. Lett. 66, 113 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11249-018-1063-5 supporting our assumption that the latter portions of each indentation would fit well to a Hertzian contact model, F=192π2GR2H3(d−do)3.(7)The intersection between the Winkler-fitting region and the Hertz-fitting region occurs at a point we define as dmatch. We can establish the contact-perceived thickness of the gradient layer as the probe indentation depth from the video-derived point of first contact dcontact until the first point of the Hertzian-fitting region dmatch—we term this distance as Δd. The magnitude of Δd can be considered the penetration depth after first contact before the Hertz contact model applies. Because it spans the substrate thickness before Hertz contact fits, it provides a rough estimate of the thickness of the gradient layer, which is how we will refer to this measure hereafter. This shows that the thickness of the gradient layer for our standard composition hydrogel is roughly 17.1 μm thick (see Table II), which is within the proposed 10–20 μm range estimated via neutron reflectometry.34,3534. Y. A. Meier, K. Zhang, N. D. Spencer, and R. Simic, Langmuir 35, 15805 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.9b0163635. Y. Gombert, R. Simič, F. Roncoroni, M. Dübner, T. Geue, and N. D. Spencer, Adv. Mater. Interfaces 6, 1901320 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1002/admi.201901320 Of this thickness, approximately 80% of this distance comprises the brush-fitting and Winkler-fitting region, which indicates the degree of “brushiness” as a function of the penetration depth: a higher percentage corresponds to the presence of loosely cross-linked chains further into the depth. The Gemini contact had a gradient-layer thickness of 25.3 μm—47% larger than the soft-substrate case, and the portion of each indentation corresponding to a brush-fitting or Winkler-fitting region dropped to 67% for a Gemini contact configuration.TABLE II. Elastic moduli, gradient-layer thickness Δd, and portion of the gradient-layer thickness interval corresponding to a Winkler model for each contact setup.
Contact setupElastic modulus E (kPa)Gradient-layer thickness Δd (μm)Winkler % of ΔdSoft-substrate33.817.179.5Gemini33.125.366.9When the indentations are plotted in a log-log format, it becomes apparent that measurement error alone cannot account for the non-Hertzian region. In Fig. 6, error bars appear nonsymmetric due to the log-log scaling, which means that it is more difficult for a low dF/du response, such as what is demonstrated in the figure, to be an erroneous measurement of a dF/du response roughly half a magnitude higher. Thus, usage of the Garcia method strongly reinforces the non-Hertzian determination of the initial response from the gradient-surface layer.It is important to note that the contact area observed throughout each indentation also deviated from a single contact model estimation. For example, using the probe displacement to predict a contact area using Hertzian contact mechanics would underpredict the actual contact area of these gradient-layered hydrogels by as much as 44% (see Fig. 7). If we instead use a piece-wise analytic model, where we use a Winkler model for the probe displacement d spanning the gradient-layer thickness Δd and a Hertzian contact model for values after that, we obtain a prediction of the contact radius that is much closer to that observed experimentally (Fig. 8). We note that this fit is not perfect since we have assumed a Winkler contact model through the initial indentation regime where brush contact and fluid squeeze-out, not Winkler contact, are the prevalent behavior; deriving contact areas for these phenomena would improve the predicted contact area fit.Next, the indentations of the other four compositions with variations in monomer and cross-linker were analyzed using the Garcia method to infer the influence of hydrogel composition. Elastic moduli for each composition were calculated using the Garcia analysis method’s K coefficient, which was found using a single-parameter least-squares fitting of a Hertzian contact model to the high-displacement data. The resulting elastic moduli are listed in Table III. The total polymer concentration M had a larger effect on the elastic modulus compared to the cross-linker ratio R. In fact, the effect of increasing cross-linker concentration (decreasing R) appears to have diminishing returns: a 67% increase in the available cross-linker increased the modulus by only 19%, while a 90% reduction in the cross-linker reduced the modulus by 92%. This suggests that cross-linking is potentially inhibited by self-linking of the bisacrylamide, which has been predicted to be the predominant polymer structure for hydrogels with high concentrations of the cross-linker.6262. Y. Gombert, F. Roncoroni, A. Sánchez-Ferrer, and N. D. Spencer, Soft Matter 16, 9789 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1039/D0SM01536ATABLE III. Composition number and their corresponding elastic moduli determined from indentation experiments. The indentation-derived gradient-layer thickness, Δd, is also listed for each contact setup.
Comp no.Elastic modulus EHowever, the results from the Gemini contact were not as predictable. While we saw larger gradient-layer thicknesses perceived for compositions 3–5 compared to their soft-substrate contact values, compositions 1 and 2 showed smaller gradient-layer thicknesses. The Gemini contact perceived gradient layers of 9.6 and 4.9 μm for compositions 1 and 2, respectively. The portion of each Δd thickness interval corresponding to a brush or Winkler model was 100% for both compositions; the initial brush response in composition 1 (R250) is stiffer than the bulk response. In soft-substrate contact, these two compositions showed thick gradient layers with a high percentage consisting of brushy behavior.
B. Creep results
Creep experiments confirmed an increase in the contact area with time, which corresponded to a pressure decrease with time (Fig. 9). The majority of contact area gain occurred within the first 200 s regardless of the contact setup. In general, smaller loads experienced greater area growth by percentage compared to larger loads. Area expansion was larger in the Gemini contact compared to the hard-probe setup. The softer two compositions (1,2) relaxed to a greater degree than the other compositions when under low loads but saw the greatest discrepancy between low-load and high-load relaxation (Table IV). Particularly in self-mated contact, we postulate that the initial probe deformation reduced the capacity for the contact to relax over time.TABLE IV. Contact area expansion compared to the initial contact for both contact configurations and for the minimum and maximum loads. Minimum loads experienced larger contact growth % compared to maximum loads.
Comp no.Area expansion (min load)TABLE V. Diffusion coefficients obtained from exponential fitting of the area relaxation of each experiment for both contact setups. Composition 1 experienced a far greater degree of viscoelasticity compared to the other four compositions.
Comp no.DSS (soft-substrate) (10−10 m2/s)DSS (Gemini) (10−10 m2/s)1N/A82.3210.420.0312.47.5143.1610.156.706.62
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