4.7 Review

A review on the features, performance and potential applications of hydrogel-based wearable strain/pressure sensors

Journal

ADVANCES IN COLLOID AND INTERFACE SCIENCE
Volume 298, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.cis.2021.102553

Keywords

Stretchable electronic; Strain sensor; Human motion monitoring; Polymeric nanocomposite; Hydrogel

Funding

  1. Iran National Science Foundation (INSF) [99017956]

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Hydrogels have shown great potential in wearable devices by overcoming the drawbacks of other materials, offering intrinsic electrical conductivity, suitable mechanical properties, and biocompatibility. Researchers are focusing on developing methods, design strategies, sensing performance, and applications of hydrogel-based strain sensors.
Over the past few years, development of wearable devices has gained increasing momentum. Notably, the demand for stretchable strain sensors has significantly increased due to many potential and emerging applications such as human motion monitoring, prosthetics, robotic systems, and touch panels. Recently, hydrogels have been developed to overcome the drawbacks of the elastomer-based wearable strain sensors, caused by insufficient biocompatibility, brittle mechanical properties, complicated fabrication process, as the hydrogels can provide a combination of various exciting properties such as intrinsic electrical conductivity, suitable mechanical properties, and biocompatibility. There are numerous research works reported in the literature which consider various aspects as preparation approaches, design strategies, properties control, and applications of hydrogelbased strain sensors. This article aims to present a review on this exciting topic with a new insight on the hydrogel-based wearable strain sensors in terms of their features, strain sensory performance, and prospective applications. In this respect, we first briefly review recent advances related to designing the materials and the methods for promoting hydrogels' intrinsic features. Then, strain (both tensile and pressure) sensing performance of prepared hydrogels is critically studied, and alternative approaches for their high-performance sensing are proposed. Subsequently, this review provides several promising applications of hydrogel-based strain sensors, including bioapplications and human-machine interface devices. Finally, challenges and future outlooks of conductive and stretchable hydrogels employed in the wearable strain sensors are discussed.

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