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      Bioinspired materials that self-shape through programmed microstructures.

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      Soft matter

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          Abstract

          Nature displays numerous examples of materials that can autonomously change their shape in response to external stimuli. Remarkably, shape changes in biological systems can be programmed within the material's microstructure to enable self-shaping capabilities even in the absence of cellular control. Here, we revisit recent attempts to replicate in synthetic materials the shape-changing behavior of selected natural materials displaying deliberately tuned fibrous architectures. Simple processing methods like drawing, spinning or casting under magnetic fields are shown to be effective in mimicking the orientation and spatial distribution of reinforcing fibers of natural materials, thus enabling unique shape-changing features in synthetic systems. The bioinspired design and creation of self-shaping microstructures represent a new pathway to program shape changes in synthetic materials. In contrast to shape-memory polymers and metallic alloys, the self-shaping capabilities in these bioinspired materials originate at the microstructural level rather than the molecular scale. This enables the creation of programmable shape changes using building blocks that would otherwise not display the intrinsic molecular/atomic phase transitions required in conventional shape-memory materials.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Soft Matter
          Soft matter
          1744-6848
          1744-683X
          Mar 7 2014
          : 10
          : 9
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Complex Materials, Department of Materials, ETH Zurich, 8093 Zurich, Switzerland. andre.studart@mat.ethz.ch.
          Article
          10.1039/c3sm51883c
          24651249
          dd45736a-7c8a-4cdf-9558-756f4760e0ab
          History

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