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Self-healing and highly adhesive conductive polydimethylsiloxane-based elastomers for chronic epilepsy monitoring

Nanoscale [2025]
Miao Tang, Ke Lei, Xingying Zhao, Xifeiling Hu, Quansheng He, Ke Zhang, Xianhui Ma, Hualiang Ni, Yousheng Shu, Zili Li
ABSTRACT

Flexible substrate materials with high adhesion, high stretchability, and low impedance are essential to ensure long-term stable acquisition of electrophysiological signals with less tissue inflammation. Polydimethylsiloxane is a promising candidate owing to its inherent flexibility and biocompatibility; however, its poor adhesion to the skin and excessive stiffness of tissue interfaces limit its application in this field. To address these challenges, we developed a flexible electrode system based on crosslinked block polyborosiloxane and carbon nanotube (C-PBS/CNT) elastomers carrying hydroxyl groups through a thiol–ene reaction. The composite exhibits enhanced adhesion to both the skin and skull, high stretchability, and tunable stiffness ranging from 10 to over 200 kPa, enabling adaptability to the long-term monitoring of epileptic activity and other application scenarios. Moreover, the C-PBS/CNT composite elastomer demonstrated excellent self-healing performance owing to its dynamic boronate ester and hydrogen bonds. The packaged C-PBS/CNT electrode demonstrates low impedance for efficient multi-channel acquisition of epileptic activity under humid conditions. These innovations enable a precise analysis of cortical epileptic-activity propagation and provide an essential technological platform for the prediction and treatment of epileptic seizures, paving the way for next-generation wearable biomedical devices.

MATERIALS

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