3D Printed Ultrastretchable, Hyper-Antifreezing Conductive Hydrogel for Sensitive Motion and Electrophysiological Signal Monitoring.
Zhaolong WangLei ChenYiqin ChenPeng LiuHuigao DuanPing ChengPublished in: Research (Washington, D.C.) (2020)
Conductive hydrogels with high stretchability can extend their applications as a flexible electrode in electronics, biomedicine, human-machine interfaces, and sensors. However, their time-consuming fabrication and narrow ranges of working temperature and working voltage severely limit their further potential applications. Herein, a conductive nanocomposite network hydrogel fabricated by projection microstereolithography (PμSL) based 3D printing is proposed, enabling fast fabrication ability with high precision. The 3D printed hydrogels exhibit ultra-stretchability (2500%), hyper-antifreezing (-125°C), extremely low working voltage (<100 μV), and super cyclic tensile stability (1 million cycles). The hydrogel-based strain sensor can probe both large-scale and tiny human motions, even with ultralow voltage of 100 μV at extremely low temperature around -115°C. It is demonstrated that the present hydrogels can be used as a flexible electrode for capturing human electrophysiological signals (EOG and EEG), where the alpha and beta waves from the brain can be recorded precisely. Therefore, the present hydrogels will pave the way for the development of next-generation intelligent electronics, especially for those working under extremely low-temperature environments.
Keyphrases
- tissue engineering
- drug delivery
- hyaluronic acid
- endothelial cells
- wound healing
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- reduced graphene oxide
- pluripotent stem cells
- quantum dots
- deep learning
- risk assessment
- magnetic resonance
- working memory
- magnetic resonance imaging
- high speed
- white matter
- brain injury
- solid state
- highly efficient
- neural network
- solid phase extraction