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Mussel-adhesive chemistry inspired conductive hydrogel with self-adhesion, biocompatibility, self-recovery and fatigue-resistance performances as flexible sensing electronics

COMPOSITES PART A-APPLIED SCIENCE AND MANUFACTURING [2024]
Jingren Ma, Chunxiao Zheng, Ya Lu, Yiying Yue, Weisheng Yang, Changtong Mei, Xinwu Xu, Huining Xiao, Jingquan Han
ABSTRACT

Conductive hydrogels are ideal candidates for wearable strain sensors due to their intrinsic stretchability and conductivity. However, it’s still a challenge to fabricate a conductive hydrogel with a combination performance of high mechanical strength, self-adhesion, sensitivity, self-recovery capability, fatigue-resistant ability and biocompatibility. Herein, a dual-network hydrogel (TG/P-LP) composed of 2,2,6,6-tetra-methylpiperidine-1-oxyl (TEMPO)-oxidized cellulose nanofibers (TOCNs) supported graphene (GN), Laponite-oxidized polydopamine (LP) and polyacrylic acid-co-poly acrylamide (P) hydrogel matrix was synthesized via a facile in-situ radical polymerization process. The optimized biocompatible TG/P-LP hydrogel exhibits a high mechanical strength, self-adhesive performance, intrinsic self-recovery capability (95.7 % in 60 min) and anti-fatigue property. The hydrogel-based strain sensor exhibits a wide strain range (0 ∼ 600 %) and a high sensitivity ( GF  = 12). This work designs a novel hydrogel-based sensor with excellent mechanical properties, long-term fatigue resistance, high strain sensitivity and wearability, demonstrating enormous potential in the applications of human motion detection and human–machine interaction.

MATERIALS

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