New recyclable adhesives can be easily adapted for medical, consumer and industrial applications

February 13, 2025

molecules

Illustration of alpha-lipoic acid molecular structure. (Image by SergeiShimanovich/Shutterstock.com)

Polymers derived from alpha-lipoic acid (αLA), a small molecule that aids in cell metabolism, have the potential to provide versatile and environmentally friendly adhesives, but their instability has long been a barrier to their use in practical settings. Now, Berkeley engineers have discovered a new chemical strategy that overcomes this impediment, opening the door to high-performance, recyclable adhesives for a wide variety of applications.

As reported today in Science, researchers have created a new family of stabilized αLA polymer adhesives by slightly altering the chemical composition of their monomers, the small molecules that make up polymers. Using this “modular monomer system,” they tailored the properties of the polymers to create adhesives for medical, consumer and industrial applications, including a surgical superglue that could significantly advance the field of fetal surgery.

“Once we discovered a chemical approach to this stabilization problem, we had a polymer on our hands that had a multitude of potential uses,” said Phillip Messersmith, principal investigator of the study and a professor of bioengineering and of materials science and engineering. “Most commercially available polymer adhesives are tailored for specific, sometimes narrow uses. But these αLA polymers have shown that they translate well across a range of applications and may be the start of a new industry paradigm, one built around multipurpose adhesives.”

According to Subhajit Pal, first author of the study and a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Bioengineering, this level of versatility is unique for an adhesive. “I don’t know of any other adhesive system or family where you can mix and match a couple of monomers together in different ratios and get this range of adhesion systems,” he said. “In addition, these novel αLA polymer adhesives often matched or surpassed the performance of commercially available products.”

The new αLA polymers also provide an environmentally friendly adhesive option, in contrast to most consumer and industrial adhesives on the market, which tend to be petroleum-based.

“These αLA polymer adhesives can be sustainably sourced — as αLA can be biomanufactured,” said Pal. “Also, they can be recycled in a closed loop system or left to degrade to non-toxic substances.”

Upon stabilizing the αLA polymer, the researchers made small modifications to the underlying monomer composition to optimize the polymers for medical, consumer and industrial applications. The result was three different products: a medical adhesive formulated to act like a surgical superglue; a pressure-sensitive adhesive, like those used for sticky notes, labels and tape; and an epoxy-like structural adhesive.

Surgical superglue

After developing the αLA polymer surgical superglue, the researchers first tested it in benchtop experiments to see how it would perform in comparison to existing medical adhesives.

“We found the mechanical and biological performance of our αLA polymer adhesive to be superior to an existing surgical sealant and a medical-grade cyanoacrylate superglue,” said Messersmith. “It provides a high-strength yet flexible adhesive that bonds when it comes into contact with wet tissue — and degrades in a timely manner, making it safe for use in the human body.”