Publications by authors named "A Bandodkar"

As the regenerative mechanisms of biological organisms, self-healing provides useful functions for soft electronics or associated systems. However, there have been few examples of soft electronics where all components have self-healing properties while also ensuring compatibility between components to achieve multifunctional and resilient bio-integrated electronics. Here, we introduce a stretchable, biodegradable, self-healing conductor constructed by combination of two layers: (i) synthetic self-healing elastomer and (ii) self-healing conductive composite with additives.

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Materials that have the ability to manipulate shapes in response to stimuli such as heat, light, humidity and magnetism offer a means for versatile, sophisticated functions in soft robotics or biomedical implants, while such a reactive transformation has certain drawbacks including high operating temperatures, inherent rigidity and biological hazard. Herein, we introduce biodegradable, self-adhesive, shape-transformable poly (L-lactide-co-ε-caprolactone) (BSS-PLCL) that can be triggered via thermal stimulation near physiological temperature (∼38 °C). Chemical inspections confirm the fundamental properties of the synthetic materials in diverse aspects, and study on mechanical and biochemical characteristics validates exceptional stretchability up to 800 % and tunable dissolution behaviors under biological conditions.

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Article Synopsis
  • Bioresorbable electronic systems require soft and stretchable substrates, but there are few elastomeric polymers with the necessary properties.
  • The newly introduced bioresorbable elastomer, poly(glycolide-co-ε-caprolactone) (PGCL), showcases impressive characteristics like high elongation, toughness, and customizable dissolution rates.
  • By combining PGCL with conductive polymers, researchers can create stretchable, conductive materials for temporary devices that support healing, like sutures with drug delivery systems for post-surgical recovery.
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