4.7 Article

Highly Elastic, Sensitive, Stretchable, and Skin-Inspired Conductive Sodium Alginate/Polyacrylamide/Gallium Composite Hydrogel with Toughness as a Flexible Strain Sensor

Journal

BIOMACROMOLECULES
Volume 23, Issue 6, Pages 2603-2613

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biomac.2c00329

Keywords

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Funding

  1. SINOPEC Research and Development Program [217015-6, 420008-1]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [22074004]

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A highly strain-sensitive skin-like hydrogel sensor was designed using acrylamide and sodium alginate, with liquid metallic gallium as a conductive filler. The sensor had similar properties to human skin, such as low elastic modulus, high toughness, and large tensile deformation, while also possessing excellent electrical conductivity and transparency. It exhibited high sensitivity to strain and pressure, enabling the monitoring of various human motions and even human-computer communication.
As a classic flexible material, hydrogels show great potential in wearable electronic devices. The application of strain sensors prepared using them in human health monitoring and humanoid robotics is developing rapidly. However, it is still a challenge to fabricate a high-toughness, largetensile-deformation, strain-sensitive. and human-skin-fit hydrogel with the integration of excellent mechanical properties and high electrical conductivity. In this study, a flexible sensor using a highly strain-sensitive skin-like hydrogel with acrylamide and sodium alginate was designed using liquid metallic gallium as a reactive conductive filler. The sensor had a low elastic modulus (30 kPa) similar to that of skin, a high-toughness (2.25 MJ m(-3)), self-stiffness, a large tensile deformation (1400%), recoverability, and excellent fatigue resistance. Moreover, the addition of gallium might enhance the electrical conductivity (1.9 S m(-1)) of the hydrogel while maintaining high transparency, and the flexible sensor device constructed from it showed high sensitivity to strain (gauge factor = 4.08) and pressure (gauge factor = 0.455 kPa(-1)) As a result, the hydrogel sensor could monitor various human motions, including large-scale joint bending and tiny facial expression, breathing, voice recognition, and handwriting. Furthermore, it might even be used for human-computer communication.

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