4.8 Article

Environment Tolerant Conductive Nanocomposite Organohydrogels as Flexible Strain Sensors and Power Sources for Sustainable Electronics

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 31, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202101696

Keywords

conductive organohydrogels; environmental tolerance; strain sensors; stretchable triboelectric nanogenerators; sustainably wearable devices

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51773183, U1804133, 52002246, 21404006, 21774012, 51973008]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China-Henan Province Joint Funds [U1604253]
  3. Henan Province University Innovation Talents Support Program [20HASTIT001]
  4. Innovation Team of Colleges and Universities in Henan Province [20IRTSTHN002]
  5. Beijing Natural Science Foundation [2152023, 2202042]
  6. National Key Research and Development Project [2016YFC0801302]
  7. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
  8. Shenzhen Fundamental Research Project [JCYJ20190808170601664]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study demonstrates an environment-tolerant and ultrastretchable organohydrogel through a simple solvent-replacement strategy, achieving excellent temperature tolerance while maintaining stability and conductivity. Experimental results show that, without sacrificing stretchability and conductivity, the organohydrogel is capable of effectively detecting and discriminating human activities in extreme conditions.
Conductive hydrogels (CHs) have been highlighted in the design of flexible strain sensors and stretchable triboelectric nanogenerators (TENGs) on the basis of their excellent physicochemical properties such as large stretchability and high conductivity. Nevertheless, the incident freezing and drying behaviors of CHs by using water solvent as the dispersion medium limit their application scopes significantly. Herein, an environment tolerant and ultrastretchable organohydrogel is demonstrated by a simple solvent-replacement strategy, in which the partial water in the as-synthesized polyacrylamide/montmorillonite/carbon nanotubes hydrogel is replaced with the glycerol, leading to excellent temperature toleration (-60 to 60 degrees C) and good stability (30 days under normal environment) without sacrificing the stretchability and conductivity. The organohydrogel exhibits an ultrawide strain sensing range (0-4196%) with a high sensitivity of 8.5, enabling effective detection and discrimination of human activities that are gentle or drastic under various conditions. Furthermore, the organohydrogel is assembled in a single-electrode TENG, which displays excellent energy harvesting ability even under a stretchability of 500% and robustness to directly power wearable electronics in harsh cold conditions. This work inspires a simple route for multifunctional organohydrogel and promises the practical application of flexible and self-powered wearable devices in extreme environments.

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