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“We want to have lots of tiny channels to let air through, while also maintaining lots of water in the gel,” Zhao says. The new design of the hydrogel, right, is compared to a previous hydrogel (clear).
Photo Credit: Melanie Gonick, MIT
(CC BY-NC-ND 3.0)
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Aerated Hydrogels
The Core Concept: An aerated hydrogel is a soft, highly hydrated, and bio-friendly polymeric material engineered with interconnected microscopic tunnels that freely permit airflow.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Unlike conventional hydrogels that trap sweat, or prior permeable designs that sacrifice hydration by utilizing large volumes of silicone, this material relies on viscoelastic phase separation. Mixing a minimal amount of hydrophobic silica aerogel particles into a water-heavy polymer solution causes the water molecules to cluster, naturally forcing the silica into stable, interconnected, and air-permeable pathways.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Viscoelastic Phase Separation: A physical dynamic akin to the interaction between oil and water, which forces differing liquid phases to rapidly separate and form distinct structural networks.
- Silica Aerogel Particles: Hydrophobic, solid-form air bubbles that resist water infiltration and establish the structural foundation of the air channels.
- Polymer Cross-Linking: The chemical mechanism utilized to solidify the polymer scaffold, locking the breathable tunnel network permanently into place.



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