Natural cellulose reinforced multifunctional eutectogels for wearable sensors and epidermal electrodes.

Carbohydr Polym

Institute of Bast Fiber Crops, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Changsha 410205, Hunan, PR China. Electronic address:

Published: January 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • Wearable electronics are revolutionizing health monitoring and clinical care, but existing materials like hydrogels and ionogels have limitations, such as weight issues and toxicity.
  • The study introduces a new multifunctional eutectogel that combines the properties of sensors and electrodes, significantly improving its strength, conductivity, and temperature resilience through the addition of cotton cellulose nanofibers.
  • This eutectogel demonstrates self-healing capabilities, strong adhesion, antibacterial properties, and is sensitive enough to detect human activities and control devices like a small car, making it promising for flexible wearable electronics.

Article Abstract

Wearable electronics significantly impact health monitoring, clinical care, and human-machine interfaces. Eutectogels, which utilize deep eutectic solvents (DES) address the drawbacks of hydrogels, such as weight loss and poor temperature tolerance, as well as the high costs and toxicities associated with ionogels. Despite these advances, most eutectogels serve only as sensors or epidermal electrodes and rarely fulfill both functions simultaneously. In this study, we present a multifunctional eutectogel designed to function in both ways. Incorporating natural cotton cellulose nanofibers as nanofillers reinforced the tensile strength of the resultant eutectogel by 7.47 times compared to that of the pure eutectogel, reaching 4.93 MPa. This eutectogel exhibited high ionic conductivity (1.22 S m), strong adhesion (1562.2 kPa to iron), self-healing ability (80.37% strain recovery and 80.53% tensile strength recovery), a broad temperature tolerance (-40 to 80 °C), and antibacterial properties. It demonstrates high sensitivity for the real-time strain detection of human activities and accurately captures electrophysiological signals, enabling the control of a small car. This versatile eutectogel has excellent potential for use in flexible wearable electronics.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.carbpol.2024.122939DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

sensors epidermal
8
epidermal electrodes
8
wearable electronics
8
temperature tolerance
8
tensile strength
8
eutectogel
5
natural cellulose
4
cellulose reinforced
4
reinforced multifunctional
4
multifunctional eutectogels
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!