Xanthan gum toughen ionically conductive hydrogels for flexible and artificial epidermis sensors with multifunctionality and self-healability

Conductive hydrogels that possess hydrophobic interaction have gained much attention in fields like strain sensors, soft robotics, tissue engineering, human-machine interaction, and biomedical sensors due to their excellent stretchability and effective energy dissipation mechanism. However, their us...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inSensors and actuators. A. Physical. Vol. 370; p. 115199
Main Authors Sher, Muhammad, Shah, Luqman Ali, Ara, Latafat, Ullah, Rafi, Khan, Mansoor, Yoo, Hyeong-Min, Fu, Jun
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 01.05.2024
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Conductive hydrogels that possess hydrophobic interaction have gained much attention in fields like strain sensors, soft robotics, tissue engineering, human-machine interaction, and biomedical sensors due to their excellent stretchability and effective energy dissipation mechanism. However, their use is limited due to poor mechanical performance, low sensing ability, lack of response time, and deficiency of self-healing capability. To overcome these limitations, acrylamide-co-butylacrylate/xanthan gum-based hydrophobically associated conductive hydrogels were designed. Amphiphilic sodium dodecyl sulfate was employed both as a cross-linker and a micelle-forming agent, while LiCl make the hydrogel as an ionic conductive material. The obtained hydrogels show fracture stress and fracture strain of 661kPa and 1100% respectively. The measured conductivity was 0.21Sm−1 and the strain sensing of the designed hydrogel reached up to 800%. Similarly, the designed hydrogels show remarkable sensitivity (Gauge factor = 28.8 at an applied strain of 800%) which is useful in the detection of a wide range of human motions. Finger, wrist, elbow, and knee joint movement can be easily detected with these hydrogels. Furthermore, the hydrogel can detect speaking, facial expressions, and pressure sensing. The designed hydrogels showed an excellent response and recovery time of 0.15 s and 0.13 s respectively. During multiple stretching and un-stretching cycles for 140 s, the designed hydrogels show continuous linear response without any current drop or fracture. Therefore the as-fabricated hydrogel presents a novel opportunity for its application in various fields such as flexible conductive material, strain sensors, human motion detection devices, and tissue engineering. [Display omitted] •A wearable strain sensor was fabricated by using hydrophobically associated poly (acrylamide co butylacrylate@Xanthan gum) hydrogel.•The designed hydrogel has good mechanical toughness and a strain level reached 1100%.•The as-fabricated strain sensor shows fatigue resistance (cyclic stability), good response time, high gauge factor, self-healing, and excellent stretchability.•The designed hydrogel can detect small and large human motions, facial expressions, mood changes, voice etc.•The as-fabricated hydrogel can detect small, moderate, and strong pressure.
ISSN:0924-4247
1873-3069
DOI:10.1016/j.sna.2024.115199