Polymerizable rotaxane hydrogels for three-dimensional printing fabrication of wearable sensors.
Xueru XiongYunhua ChenZhenxing WangHuan LiuMengqi LeCaihong LinGang WuLin WangXuetao ShiYong-Guang JiaRongjun ZhaoPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
While hydrogels enable a variety of applications in wearable sensors and electronic skins, they are susceptible to fatigue fracture during cyclic deformations owing to their inefficient fatigue resistance. Herein, acrylated β-cyclodextrin with bile acid is self-assembled into a polymerizable pseudorotaxane via precise host-guest recognition, which is photopolymerized with acrylamide to obtain conductive polymerizable rotaxane hydrogels (PR-Gel). The topological networks of PR-Gel enable all desirable properties in this system due to the large conformational freedom of the mobile junctions, including the excellent stretchability along with superior fatigue resistance. PR-Gel based strain sensor can sensitively detect and distinguish large body motions and subtle muscle movements. The three-dimensional printing fabricated sensors of PR-Gel exhibit high resolution and altitude complexity, and real-time human electrocardiogram signals are detected with high repeating stability. PR-Gel can self-heal in air, and has highly repeatable adhesion to human skin, demonstrating its great potential in wearable sensors.
Keyphrases
- hyaluronic acid
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- heart rate
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- single molecule
- drug release
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- extracellular matrix
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- gold nanoparticles
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- hip fracture
- capillary electrophoresis
- cell migration
- liquid chromatography
- water soluble
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