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1.
J Mater Chem B ; 12(28): 6940-6958, 2024 Jul 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38912903

ABSTRACT

Conductive hydrogels (CHs) with high sensitivity and multifunctional property are considered as excellent materials for wearable devices and flexible electronics. Surface synapses and internal multilayered structures are key factors for highly sensitive pressure sensors. Nevertheless, current CHs lack environmental adaptability, multifunctional perception, and instrument portability, which seriously hinders their application as sensors. Here, waste collagen fibers (buffing dust of leather), polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) and gelatin (Gel) were used as the basic framework of the hydrogel, loaded with a conductive material (silver nanoparticles (BD-CQDs@AgNPs)) and an anti-freezing moisturizer (glycerol (Gly)), resulting in a multifunctional conductive organohydrogel (BPGC-Gly). As a temperature and humidity sensor, it demonstrated an excellent temperature response range (-20-60 °C) and was capable of rapid response (2.4 s) and recovery (1.6 s) to human breathing. As a strain/pressure sensor, it allowed real-time monitoring of human movement and had a high low-pressure sensitivity (S = 4.26 kPa-1, 0-12.5 kPa). Interestingly, BPGC-Gly could also be used as a portable bioelectrode or the acquisition, monitoring and analysis of EMG/ECG signals. In this work, BPGC-Gly was assembled with wireless transmission to achieve multimodal heath detection, which opens new avenues for multi-responsive CHs, comprehensive human health monitoring and next-generation wearable electronic skin (e-skin).


Subject(s)
Collagen , Electric Conductivity , Hydrogels , Silver , Wearable Electronic Devices , Hydrogels/chemistry , Humans , Silver/chemistry , Collagen/chemistry , Metal Nanoparticles/chemistry , Temperature , Particle Size
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38676634

ABSTRACT

Conductive hydrogels are ideal materials for intelligent medical devices, human-machine interfaces, and flexible bioelectrodes due to their adjustable mechanical properties and electrical responsiveness, whereas it is still a great challenge to achieve the integration of excellent flexibility and biocompatibility into one hydrogel sensor while also incorporating self-healing, self-adhesion, environmental tolerance, and antimicrobial properties. Here, a nanocomposite conductive organohydrogel was constructed by using collagen (Col), alginate-derived carbon quantum dots (OSA-CQDs), poly(acrylic acid) (PAA), ethylene glycol reduced AgNPs, and Fe3+ ions. Depending on OSA-CQDs with multiple chemical binding sites and high specific surface area as cross-linkers, while coupling highly biologically active Col chains and PAA chains are serving as an energy dissipation module, the resulting organohydrogel exhibited excellent flexibility (795% of strain, 193 kPa of strength), high cell compatibility (>95% survival rate), self-healing efficiency (HE = 79.5%), antifreezing (-20 °C), moisturizing (>120 h), repeatable adhesion (strength >20 kPa, times >10), inhibitory activity against Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus (9 and 21.5 cm2), conductivity, and strain sensitivity (σ = 1.34 S/m, gauge factor (GF) = 11.63). Based on the all-in-one integration of multifunction, the organohydrogel can collaboratively adapt to the multimode of strain sensing and electrophysiological sensing to realize wireless real-time monitoring of human activities and physiological health. Therefore, this work provides a new and common platform for the design and sensing of next-generation hydrogel-based smart wearable sensors.

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