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A high-conductive, anti-freezing, antibacterial and anti-swelling starch-based physical hydrogel for multifunctional flexible wearable sensors

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MACROMOLECULES [2022]
Lu Lu, Zunxiang Huang, Xiaonan Li, Xueting Li, Bo Cui, Chao Yuan, Li Guo, Pengfei Liu, Qilin Dai
ABSTRACT

Flexible wearable sensors based on conductive hydrogels are attracting increasing interest. To meet the urgent demands of sustainability and eco-friendliness, biopolymer-based physically crosslinked hydrogels have drawn great attention. Starch has a great potential due to its renewability, biocompatibility, nontoxicity and low cost. However, poor mechanical property, low conductivity and lack of versatility are seriously limiting the applications of starch-based hydrogels in wearable sensors. Moreover, the development of starch hydrogel-based wearable sensors in harsh conditions remains a challenge. Herein, multifunctional and physical crosslinking hydrogels were developed by introducing ionic liquid (1-ethyl-3-methyl imidazolium acetate) and metal salt (AlCl 3 ) into starch/polyvinyl alcohol double-network structure. The hydrogel exhibited excellent stretchability (567%), tensile strength (0.53 MPa), high conductivity (2.75 S·m −1 ), good anti-freezing, antibacterial and anti-swelling properties. A wearable sensor assembled from the starch-based hydrogel exhibited a wide working range, high sensitivity (gauge factor: 5.93) and excellent reversibility. Due to the versatility, the sensor effectively detected human motion in normal and underwater environment, and possessed a sensitive pressure and thermal response. Overall, the present work provided a promising route to develop multifunctional and “green” biopolymer-based hydrogels for wearable sensors in human health and sporting applications.

MATERIALS

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