4.6 Article

A Lamellibranchia-inspired epidermal electrode for electrophysiology

Journal

MATERIALS HORIZONS
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages 1047-1057

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0mh01656j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21903007, 22072006]
  2. Young Thousand Talents Program [110532103]
  3. Beijing Normal University [312232102]
  4. Beijing Municipal Science & Technology Commission [Z191100000819002]
  5. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [310421109]

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This study developed a gel-free epidermal electrode inspired by Lamellibranchia, featuring high stretchability, transparency, gentle adhesion, and rapid self-healing. The electrode can acquire high-quality electrophysiological signals and serve as a crucial intermediate for human-machine interfaces.
The capability to accurately monitor electrophysiological signals and instantly provide feedback to users is crucial for wearable healthcare. However, commercial gel electrodes suffer from drying out and irritation on skin with time, severely affecting signal quality for practical use. Toward a gel-free electrophysiology, epidermal electrodes that can accurately detect biosignals and simultaneously achieve the multifunctional properties of on-skin electronics needs are highly desirable. In this work, inspired by Lamellibranchia, which can adhere tightly to various surfaces using their extensible, adhesive and self-healing byssal threads, we developed a gel-free epidermal electrode to acquire high-quality electrophysiological signals based on a novel polymer substrate design. This polymer (STAR) features extreme stretchability (>2300% strain), high transparency (>90% transmittance at lambda = 550 nm), gentle adhesion (adhesion strengths: tens of kPa), and rapid self-healing ability (95% healing efficiency in 10 min). Combined with silver nanowires as conductors, STAR was employed as a self-healing, stretchable and adhesive epidermal electrode for electrophysiological signal recording, showing a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) even higher than that of commercial electrodes, and being able to control an artificial limb as an intermediate for human-machine interface. We believe our Lamellibranchia inspired STAR will pave a new way to design multifunctional polymers for epidermal electronics, accelerating the development of emerging wearable healthcare.

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