Wearable, Antifreezing, and Healable Epidermal Sensor Assembled from Long-Lasting Moist Conductive Nanocomposite Organohydrogel.
Di MaXiaoxuan WuYonggang WangHui LiaoPengbo WanLiqun ZhangPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2019)
Flexible wearable soft epidermal sensors assembled from conductive hydrogels have recently attracted tremendous research attention because of their extensive and significant applications in body-attachable healthcare monitoring, ultrasensitive electronic skins, and personal healthcare diagnosis. However, traditional conductive hydrogels inevitably face the challenge of long-term usage under room temperature and cold conditions, due to the lost water, elasticity, and conductivity at room temperature, and freezing at the water icing temperatures. It severely limits the applications in flexible electronics at room temperature or cold environment. Herein, we report a flexible, wearable, antifreezing, and healable epidermal sensor assembled from an antifreezing, long-lasting moist, and conductive organohydrogel. The nanocomposite organohydrogel is prepared from the conformal coating of functionalized reduced graphene oxide network by the hydrogel polymer networks consisting of poly(vinyl alcohol), phenylboronic acid grafted alginate, and polyacrylamide in the binary ethylene glycol (EG)/H2O solvent system. The obtained organohydrogel exhibits excellent temperature tolerance (-40 °C), long-lasting moisture (20 days), reliable self-healing ability, and can be assembled as wearable sensor for an accurate detection of both large and tiny human activities under extreme environment. Thus, it paves the way for the design of highly sensitive wearable epidermal sensors with reliable long-lasting moisture and excellent temperature tolerance for potential versatile applications in electronic skins, wearable healthcare monitoring, and human-machine interaction.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- reduced graphene oxide
- healthcare
- gold nanoparticles
- wound healing
- ionic liquid
- heart rate
- tissue engineering
- endothelial cells
- drug delivery
- quantum dots
- hyaluronic acid
- blood pressure
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- climate change
- label free
- high resolution
- pluripotent stem cells
- mass spectrometry
- health information
- working memory
- social media
- fluorescent probe
- molecularly imprinted
- single molecule
- living cells
- simultaneous determination
- affordable care act