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Immovable rubber ducks demonstrate highest-performing underwater adhesive hydrogel polymer

Getting sticky: The highest-performing underwater adhesive hydrogel polymer
A photograph of a rubber duck adhered to a seaside rock using novel hydrogel technology withstanding repeated ocean tides and wave impacts. Credit: WPI-ICReDD, Hokkaido University

Hydrogels are a permeable soft material consisting of polymer networks and water with applications ranging from biomedical engineering to contact lenses. Intrinsic to hydrogels is the ability to endow diverse characteristics by modifying their polymer networks.

Professor Gong's research lab at WPI-ICReDD, Hokkaido University, specializes in technology and has engineered hydrogels with self-strengthening, self-healing, underwater adhesion properties and more. For adhesive hydrogels, achieving instant, strong, and repeatable underwater adhesion is a prevailing challenge.

Through a combination of and machine learning, Professor Gong, Professor Takigawa, Professor Fan, graduate student Liao, and colleagues have recently developed the strongest underwater-adhesive hydrogels to date with adhesive strengths (Fa) exceeding 1 MPa.

The gels' strength was both instant and repeatable and they are functional across various surfaces under variable levels of salinity, from pure water to seawater. This research is published in Nature.

A rubber duck attached to a seaside rock using the hydrogel as a glue withstood repeated ocean tides and wave impacts, demonstrating its adhesive strength. Credit: WPI-ICReDD, Hokkaido University

For reference, if these hydrogels were cut to the size of a single postage stamp (2.5 x 2.5 cm), they could theoretically support ~63 kg (e.g. an adult human). The researchers demonstrated the hydrogel's adhesive strength by applying it to a rubber duck on a seaside rock where it withstood repeated ocean tides and wave impacts.

Taking inspiration from biology, these hydrogels were designed with polymer networks derived from found in archaea, bacteria, eukaryotes, and viruses.

Despite the diversity across these organisms, these proteins share common sequence patterns that endow adhesion in wet environments. For this, ~25,000 adhesive protein datasets, collected from the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) protein database, were data mined for relevant amino acid sequences important for underwater adhesion.

They replicated these sequences into polymer networks and synthesized 180 hydrogels鈥攅ach containing unique polymer networks. The data compiled from studying these were analyzed with machine learning, which further extrapolated the most significant sequences.

A water leak from a damaged pipe with a 20 millimeter wide hole could be covered instantly and repeatedly with the hydrogel. Credit: WPI-ICReDD, Hokkaido University

The original 180 gels synthesized from data mining demonstrated adhesive qualities greater than gels previously reported in the literature. However, the gels inspired by were more incredible, exceeding the highly desired qualities mentioned above.

Repeatable and instant adhesion are highly desired qualities for applications ranging from and deep-sea exploration. These qualities were confirmed in an experiment in which the water leak from a damaged pipe could be covered instantly and repeatedly.

More information: Data-Driven De Novo Design of Super-Adhesive Hydrogels, Nature (2025).

Laura Russo, AI learns from nature to design super-adhesive gels that work underwater, Nature (2025). DOI: 10.1038/d41586-025-02252-z

Journal information: Nature

Provided by Hokkaido University

Citation: Immovable rubber ducks demonstrate highest-performing underwater adhesive hydrogel polymer (2025, August 6) retrieved 15 August 2025 from /news/2025-08-immovable-rubber-ducks-highest-underwater.html
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