Kejin Yu, Lina Yang, Siyu Zhang, Ning Zhang, He Liu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Hydrogels are among the most promising flexible sensing materials, exhibiting extensive applications in wearable devices, human health monitoring, robotics, etc. Currently, hydrogels that are stretchable, self-healing, antifreezing, and conductive have become the focus of research on wearable sensors. However, integrating high tensile strength, self-healing, frost resistance, and satisfactory mechanical properties into a conductive hydrogel remains challenging. Herein, soy hull nanocellulose, graphene oxide, and CaCl2 were integrated into a polyvinyl alcohol–chitosan framework through green physical-crosslinking and ionic-crosslinking methods to build a porous three-dimensional network structure and develop a strong, tough, self-healing, antifreezing, and multifunctional hydrogel. This hydrogel benefits from abundant hydrogen, ester, and metal coordination bonds and electrostatic interactions, which contribute to its exceptional tensile strength (709.48 %), viscoelasticity (1081.71 kPa), mechanical strength (tensile strength = 4.91 MPa and compressive strength = 5.11 MPa), conductivity (5.11 S/m), and frost resistance (−35 ℃). Moreover, it exhibits high sensitivity with a measurement factor of 7.14 and maintains impressive electrical stability after 800 cycles of stretching at room temperature (25 ℃) and a low temperature (−35 ℃). Further, this hydrogel is used for applications such as human limb bending and heart rate monitoring. Overall, this research offers a promising approach for developing sustainable and multifunctional hydrogels as well as provides notable insights with regard to flexible wearable sensors.
期刊介绍:
The journal provides an international medium for the publication of theoretical and experimental studies and reviews related to the electronic, electrochemical, ionic, magnetic, optical, and biosensing properties of solid state materials in bulk, thin film and particulate forms. Papers dealing with synthesis, processing, characterization, structure, physical properties and computational aspects of nano-crystalline, crystalline, amorphous and glassy forms of ceramics, semiconductors, layered insertion compounds, low-dimensional compounds and systems, fast-ion conductors, polymers and dielectrics are viewed as suitable for publication. Articles focused on nano-structured aspects of these advanced solid-state materials will also be considered suitable.