Moisture Sensitive Smart Yarns and Textiles
from Self-Balanced Silk Fiber Muscles
Jia, TJ (Jia, Tianjiao)[ 1 ] ; Wang, Y (Wang,
Yang)[ 2 ] ; Dou, YY (Dou,
Yuanyuan)[ 1 ] ; Li, YW (Li,
Yaowang)[ 3 ] ; de Andrade, MJ (de Andrade, Monica Jung)[ 4 ] ; Wang, R (Wang,
Run)[ 5 ] ; Fang, SL (Fang,
Shaoli)[ 4 ] ; Li, JJ (Li,
Jingjing)[ 1 ] ; Yu, Z (Yu, Zhou)[ 6 ] ; Qiao, R (Qiao,
Rui)[ 6 ] ; Liu, ZJ (Liu,
Zhuangjian); Cheng, Y (Cheng,
Yuan)[ 7 ] ; Su, YW (Su,
Yewang)[ 8,9,10 ] ; Minary-Jolandan, M (Minary-Jolandan, Majid)[ 2 ] ; Baughman, RH (Baughman, Ray H.)[ 4 ] ; Qian, D (Qian,
Dong)[ 2 ] ; Liu, ZF (Liu,
Zunfeng)[ 1 ]
ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, 2019, 29(18): Article Number:1808241
DOI:10.1002/adfm.201808241
Abstract
Smart textiles that sense, interact, and adapt to environmental stimuli
have provided exciting new opportunities for a variety of applications.
However, current advances have largely remained at the research stage due to
the high cost, complexity of manufacturing, and uncomfortableness of
environment-sensitive materials. In contrast, natural textile materials are
more attractive for smart textiles due to their merits in terms of low cost and
comfortability. Here, water fog and humidity-driven torsional and tensile
actuation of thermally set twisted, coiled, plied silk fibers, and weave
textiles from these silk fibers are reported. When exposed to water fog, the
torsional silk fiber provides a fully reversible torsional stroke of 547 degrees
mm(-1). Coiled-and-thermoset silk yarns provide a 70% contraction when the
relative humidity is changed from 20% to 80%. Such an excellent actuation
behavior originates from water absorption-induced loss of hydrogen bonds within
the silk proteins and the associated structural transformation, which are
corroborated by atomistic and macroscopic characterization of silk and
molecular dynamics simulations. With its large abundance, cost-effectiveness,
and comfortability for wearing, the silk muscles will open up additional
possibilities in industrial applications, such as smart textiles and soft
robotics.