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1.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39186730

RESUMO

Additive manufacturing (AM) is emerging as an eco-friendly method for minimizing waste, as the demand for responsive materials in IoT and Industry 4.0 is on the rise. Magnetoactive composites, which are manufactured through AM, facilitate nonintrusive remote sensing and actuation. Printed magnetoelectric composites are an innovative method that utilizes the synergies between magnetic and electric properties. The study of magnetoelectric effects, including the recently validated piezoinductive effect, demonstrates the generation of electric voltage through external AC and DC magnetic fields. This shift in magnetic sensors, utilizing piezoinductive effect of the piezoelectric polymer poly(vinylidene fluoride), PVDF, eliminates the need for magnetic fillers in printed devices, aligning with sustainability principles, essential for the deployment of IoT and Industry 4.0. The achieved sensitivity surpasses other studies by 100 times, showcasing linear outputs for both applied AC and DC magnetic fields. Additionally, the sensor capitalizes on the linear phase shift of the generated signal with an applied DC magnetic field, an unprecedented effect. Thus, this work introduces a remarkable magnetoactive device with a sensitivity of ST = 95.1 ± 0.9 µV Oe-1 mT-1, a significantly improved performance compared to magnetoelectric devices using polymer composites. As a functional proof of concept of the developed system, a magnetic position sensor has been demonstrated.

2.
Adv Mater ; 35(33): e2302919, 2023 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37352335

RESUMO

Highly conductive hydrogels with biotissue-like mechanical properties are of great interest in the emerging field of hydrogel bioelectronics due to their good biocompatibility, deformability, and stability. Fully polymeric hydrogels may exhibit comparable Young's modulus to biotissues. However, most of these filler-free hydrogels have a low electrical conductivity of <10 S cm-1 , which limits their wide applications of them in digital circuits or bioelectronic devices. In this work, a series of metal-halides-doped poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrene sulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS) hydrogels with an ultrahigh electrical conductivity up to 547 S cm-1 is reported, which is 1.5 times to 104 times higher than previously reported filler-free polymeric hydrogels. Theoretical calculation demonstrated that the ion exchange between PEDOT:PSS and the metal halides played an important role to promote phase separation in the hydrogels, which thus leads to ultrahigh electrical conductivity. The high electrical conductivity resulted in multifunctional hydrogels with high performance in thermoelectrics, electromagnetic shielding, Joule heating, and sensing. Such flexible and stretchable hydrogels with ultrahigh electrical conductivity and stability upon various deformations are promising for soft bioelectronics devices and wearable electronics.

3.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 12(25): 28596-28606, 2020 Jun 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32459467

RESUMO

Transparent electromagnetic interference (EMI) shields are increasingly in demand for medical, military, wireless networks, aerospace electronics, and navigation control systems. To date, researchers have mixed pristine and/or doped conductive polymers with carbon allotropes and metallic fillers to increase the total shielding effectiveness, compromising the transparency, amount of the materials used, and weight of the shields. Obtaining cost-effective and transparent EMI shields without the need to incorporate fillers is extremely desirable. Herein, we implement a design strategy for fabricating a gigahertz (GHz) highly transparent shield made of poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrene sulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS). The total EMI shielding effectiveness of 15 dB is achieved in the X-band frequency range for a 50 nm ultrathin film with a high transparency of 97.1%. The fabricated filler-free EMI shield holds a record thickness-specific shielding figure-of-merit of 300 dB µm-1-far exceeding the best values for micron-thick silver-, carbon-, and MXene-based composite material shields-with even a higher transparency. The feasibility of the developed filler-free shield for large-scale applications is validated by its integration into a cell phone display glass, as a prototype, in which the EMI shielding effectiveness elevates to 18.3 dB.

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