Cartilage-inspired superlubricious hydrogels

 · Invited

Abstract

The uniquely-efficient lubrication of articular cartilage up to high physiological pressures in the major joints (hips and knees) has been attributed to surface boundary layers of macromolecules complexed with phosphatidylcholine (PC) lipids, where the exposed highly hydrated phosphocholine groups massively reduce friction via the hydration lubrication mechanism. We have emulated nature by constructing hydrogels exposing similar PC-based boundary layers at their surfaces, and by incorporating such PC lipids in the hydrogel bulk we achieve self-maintaining lubricant layers which permanently reduce the friction and wear of the hydrogels by up to a 100-fold or more, down to the superlubrication level (coefficient of friction < 0.01) at contact stresses up to many MPa. Such hydrogels hold promise in a wide range of biomedical applications.

(I thank my co-workers on this study: Weifeng Lin, Monika Kluzek, Noa Iuster, Eyal Shimony, Nir Kampf and particularly Ronit Goldberg)

*We thank the European Research Council (ERC AdG Cartilube), the McCutchen Foundation, the Israel Science Foundation-National Science Foundation China (Grant 2577/17), the Israel Ministry of Science and Technology (Grant 713272) and the Weizmann-EPFL Collaboration Program funded by the Rothschild Caesarea Foundation, for support of this work., and Michael Urbakh for comments on the ms. The electron microscopy studies were conducted at the Irving and Cherna Moskowitz Center for Nano and Bio-Nano Imaging at the Weizmann Institute of Science.

Presenters

  • Jacob Klein

    • Weizmann Institute of Science

Authors

  • Jacob Klein

    • Weizmann Institute of Science