Mussel-Inspired Flexible, Wearable, and Self-Adhesive Conductive Hydrogels for Strain Sensors.
Rui LvZhongwu BeiYuan HuangYangwei ChenZhiqiang ZhengQingliang YouChao ZhuYiping CaoPublished in: Macromolecular rapid communications (2019)
The latest generation of wearable devices features materials that are flexible, conductive, and stretchable, thus meeting the requirements of stability and reliability. However, the metal conductors that are currently used in various equipments cannot achieve these high performance expectations. Hence, a mussel-inspired conductive hydrogel (HAC-B-PAM) is prepared with a facile approach by employing polyacrylamide (PAM), dopamine-functionalized hyaluronic acid (HAC), borax as a dynamic cross-linker agent, and Li+ and Na+ as conductive ions. HAC-B-PAM hydrogels demonstrate an excellent stretchability (up to 2800%), high tensile toughness (42.4 kPa), self-adhesive properties (adhesion strength to porcine skin of 49.6 kPa), and good self-healing properties without any stimuli at room temperature. Furthermore, the fabricated hydrogel-based strain sensor is sensitive to deformation and can detect human body motion. Multifunctional hydrogels can be assembled into flexible wearable devices with potential applications in the field of electronic skin and soft robotics.
Keyphrases
- hyaluronic acid
- reduced graphene oxide
- tissue engineering
- room temperature
- wound healing
- drug delivery
- quantum dots
- heart rate
- solid state
- endothelial cells
- soft tissue
- gold nanoparticles
- metal organic framework
- metabolic syndrome
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- cystic fibrosis
- uric acid
- biofilm formation
- staphylococcus aureus
- human health
- high speed
- molecularly imprinted
- cell migration
- aqueous solution
- highly efficient