4.8 Article

Scalable Fabrication of Kevlar/Ti3C2Tx MXene Intelligent Wearable Fabrics with Multiple Sensory Capabilities

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 15, Issue 5, Pages 8676-8685

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c00749

Keywords

Ti3C2Tx MXene; fiber-based electronic; touchless sensing; respiratory monitoring; solvent recognition; information encryption

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51733003]

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The article introduces an intelligent wearable fabric based on Kevlar/MXene (KM) with multiple sensory capabilities, including a smart mask for monitoring human breathing and a temperature-responsive sensory glove for sensing surrounding hazards, and also for soft robotics to roughly identify the basic properties of liquid molecules.
Fiber-based wearable electronics are highly desirable for wearable devices that are expected to be lightweight, easily prepared, durable, flexible, washable, and conformable. However, developing fiber-based fabric electronics to simulate human perceptual systems or even transcend the sensory capabilities of natural creatures is still a pivotal challenge. Herein, we present a Kevlar/MXene (KM) intelligent wearable fabric with multiple sensory capabilities using an ingenious strategy of continuous wet-spinning. The KM fibers can be washed, knitted, sewed, and fabricated into smart KM fabric sensory systems. An intelligent KM sensory mask is prepared to monitor human breathing in time to detect respiratory problems with high accuracy and portability. It provides an important reference for judging diseases and achieving remote diagnosis. Additionally, a smart temperature-responsive sensory glove is developed to help people make proper behavioral prejudgments and prevent potential injuries by sensing surrounding hazards beforehand. Moreover, this sensory system allows soft robotics to make a rough identification about the basic properties of unknown liquid molecules. Overall, by the virtue of the ultrafast responsiveness (90 ms), resilience (110 ms), and ultrasensitive capability in pressure responding, this KM sensory system offers a gentle approach for wireless detection in information encryption, transmission, and preservation by touching the sensory system with variable pressing time on the basis of the International Morse code principles, establishing a competitive and promising candidate for next generation wearable flexible fabric electronics.

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