Low modulus hydrogel-like elastomer sensors with ultra-fast self-healing, underwater self-adhesion, high durability/stability and recyclability for bioelectronics

  • Zhenlong Li
  • , Huiru Xu
  • , Zexing Deng
  • , Baolin Guo
  • , Jie Zhang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

28 Scopus citations

Abstract

Flexible sensors simultaneously with property of hydrogel-like low modulus/room temperature ultra-fast self-healing and with elastomer-like durability /environmental stability and underwater adhesion for bioelectronics has not been reported. A low modulus hydrogel-like elastomer that achieves ultrafast self-healing through molecular chain entanglement at room temperature was prepared based on furfuryl alcohol-modified poly(sebacate glyceride) (PGS) prepolymer, furfuryl alcohol-modified poly(ionic liquid) and bismaleimide by Diels-Alder (DA) reaction. The conductive elastomer-based flexible sensors exhibit hydrogel-like properties of low modulus (6.41 kPa) and ultra-fast self-healing (98 % self-healing efficiency within 5 s). The elastomer also possesses rapid subzero and underwater self-healing properties within 5 s. Moreover, PGS-0.2DA-0.2PIL exhibits pressure sensitive adhesive properties and can be adhered/re-adhered in water. The flexible sensor shows elastomer-like high durability, high environmental stability, multiple recyclability and reusability, and it exhibits wide detection ranges, fast response time, low hysteresis, anti-freezing, anti-bacterial and good biocompatibility. The flexible sensors can accurately identify micro-expressions/eye rotation, monitor human movement/health, detect ECG/EMG signals and control robotic arm movements. In conclusion, a new strategy for design of hydrogel-like conductive elastomers via molecular structure design is proposed, and the elastomers-based flexible sensors with low modulus, rapid self-healing and durability/environmental stability show great promising for bioelectronic applications.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102469
JournalNano Today
Volume59
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2024

Keywords

  • ECG signal
  • EMG signals
  • Flexible sensors
  • Health monitoring
  • Human-computer interaction

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