4.6 Article

Bioinspired, nucleobase-driven, highly resilient, and fast-responsive antifreeze ionic conductive hydrogels for durable pressure and strain sensors

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A
Volume 9, Issue 36, Pages 20703-20713

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1ta05262d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21534005, 22073051]

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This study fabricated a novel ionic conductive hydrogel with a unique structure, showing excellent stretchability, resilience, sensitivity, and fast strain responsiveness, which can be applied in detecting various daily activities.
Conductive hydrogels have drawn tremendous attention in flexible devices, soft robotics, and artificial intelligence. The integration of synergistic characteristics such as reliable resilience, high strain sensitivity, and excellent mechanical properties is still a great challenge in strain sensors. Inspired by the heterogeneous network structure of biological soft tissues, herein, a novel ionic conductive hydrogel was fabricated by the interconnection between a soft hydrogen bond cross-linked polymeric network and rigid domains cross-linked by double hydrogen bonding, hydrophobic interaction, and pi-pi stacking. The completely physically cross-linked hydrogel exhibited excellent stretchable property (680%) and great resilience (92.53%). Besides, owing to numerous free moving ions (Li+, Na+, and Cl-) in the system, the hydrogel possessed high sensitivity (GF = 3.12) and fast strain responsiveness (<= 100 ms) in a broad temperature range (-20-25 degrees C). Moreover, the hydrogel displayed tunable electromechanical behavior with durable stability and anti-fatigue variations in resistance upon mechanical deformation such as the detection of various daily human activities, including the variations of the fingers, elbow and larynx, and, jogging. Therefore, this soft and rigid structure provides a feasible solution for fabricating a high-performance ionic conductive hydrogel, which has potential as a multi-functional sensor in wearable devices, artificial intelligence, and electric skins.

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