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A tough, anticorrosive hydrogel consisting of bio-friendly resources for conductive and electromagnetic shielding materials

NEW JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY [2023]
Yuhuan Xu, Meng Pei, Jingyu Du, Renyuan Yang, Yong Pan, Daohai Zhang, Shuhao Qin
ABSTRACT

The rapid development of electronic technology requires the use of high performance electromagnetic interference shielding materials to establish a safe environment, and environmentally friendly materials cannot be ignored. This paper explores the use of sodium alginate (SA), a naturally readily biodegradable material, to induce spontaneous assembly polymerisation by the addition of monovalent tide salts (NaCl); this is then chemically cross-linked with polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) and polyethylene glycol (PEG) to form a highly ductile support structure between them, resulting in an anticorrosive, highly ductile hydrogel that can be used as a conductive and electromagnetic shielding material. The results indicate that the strength of the PVA-PEG-SA-180 hydrogel is 16.1 MPa, the elongation at break is 204.93%, and the conductivity of 15 ms mm−1 is 174.4%, 188.14%, and 25041.7% higher than that of the PVA-PEG-SA-0 hydrogel. At a thickness of only 2 mm, the average electromagnetic shielding effectiveness (SE) was 32.64 dB. It is worth mentioning that the corrosion protection effect appeared after only 7 days.

MATERIALS

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