Today’s Solutions: September 17, 2023

Scientists from Australia have developed a jelly-like material that acts like living tissue. The jelly, which is known as hydrogel, is strong, malleable, and able to heal itself. That could be extremely important for healing people with damaged skin, ligaments, or bones. Hydrogels are 3D polymer structures that are strongly hydrophilic, allowing them to contain over 90 percent water. To date, they’ve been used as scaffolding for bioengineering, self-irrigating wound dressings, contact lenses, diapers, soil moisturizing, and prosthetic limbs. But one feature of hydrogels that is of particular interest to scientists is how they can mimic living tissue – not just in terms of static properties, but also, when stimulated, change volume. According to the researchers, the jelly could be used as a 3D-printable ink and could be scaled up to produce more advanced medical implants. The researchers also say they could find application in the next generation of soft robots, which, as the name implies, are softer robots that could improve flexibility and adaptability for accomplishing tasks as well as improving safety when working around humans.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Iceland recommends this natural remedy to help with social isolation

Given that humans are by nature social animals, in a time when close contact and embracing are discouraged to slow the spread of the ...

Read More

Try this simple breathing exercise to rid yourself of cold hands and feet

Do you often find that your hands and feet are colder than the rest of your body? This can be perplexing, especially when gloves ...

Read More

How historic cemeteries help biodiversity thrive

Historic burial places often bring about thoughts of peace and death, however, they actually have a lot of potential for preserving ecological systems and ...

Read More

Family’s tortoise missing for 30 years turns up in the attic

Pet owners everywhere would agree: the loss of a pet is a difficult event to process—especially in the case of a missing pet. Dealing ...

Read More