TY - JOUR
T1 - In Situ Structural Densification of Hydrogel Network and Its Interface with Electrodes for High-Performance Multimodal Artificial Skin
AU - Luo, Luqi
AU - Wu, Zixuan
AU - Ding, Qiongling
AU - Wang, Hao
AU - Luo, Yibing
AU - Yu, Jiahao
AU - Guo, Hui
AU - Tao, Kai
AU - Zhang, Sheng
AU - Huo, Fengwei
AU - Wu, Jin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2024/6/18
Y1 - 2024/6/18
N2 - The multisensory responsiveness of hydrogels positions them as promising candidates for artificial skin, whereas the mismatch of modulus between soft hydrogels and hard electrodes as well as the poor adhesion and conductance at the interface greatly impairs the stability of electronics devices. Herein, we propose an in situ postprocessing approach utilizing electrochemical reactions between metals (Zn, etc.) and hydrogels to synergistically achieve strong adhesion of the hydrogel-electrode interface, low interfacial impedance, and local strain isolation due to the structural densification of the hydrogel network. The mechanism is that Zn electrochemically oxidizes to Zn2+ and injects into the hydrogel, gradually forming a mechanically interlocked structure, Zn2+-polymer dual-helix structural nodes, and a high-modulus ZnO from the surface to the interior. Compared to untreated samples, the treated sample displays 8.7 times increased interfacial adhesion energy between the hydrogel and electrode (87 J/m2), 95% decreased interfacial impedance (218.8 Ω), and a high-strain isolation efficiency (ϵtotal/ϵisolation > 400). Akin to human skin, the prepared sensor demonstrates multimodal sensing capabilities, encompassing highly sensitive strain perception and simultaneous perception of temperature, humidity, and oxygen content unaffected by strain interference. This easy on-chip preparation of hydrogel-based multimodal sensor array shows great potential for health and environment monitoring as artificial skin.
AB - The multisensory responsiveness of hydrogels positions them as promising candidates for artificial skin, whereas the mismatch of modulus between soft hydrogels and hard electrodes as well as the poor adhesion and conductance at the interface greatly impairs the stability of electronics devices. Herein, we propose an in situ postprocessing approach utilizing electrochemical reactions between metals (Zn, etc.) and hydrogels to synergistically achieve strong adhesion of the hydrogel-electrode interface, low interfacial impedance, and local strain isolation due to the structural densification of the hydrogel network. The mechanism is that Zn electrochemically oxidizes to Zn2+ and injects into the hydrogel, gradually forming a mechanically interlocked structure, Zn2+-polymer dual-helix structural nodes, and a high-modulus ZnO from the surface to the interior. Compared to untreated samples, the treated sample displays 8.7 times increased interfacial adhesion energy between the hydrogel and electrode (87 J/m2), 95% decreased interfacial impedance (218.8 Ω), and a high-strain isolation efficiency (ϵtotal/ϵisolation > 400). Akin to human skin, the prepared sensor demonstrates multimodal sensing capabilities, encompassing highly sensitive strain perception and simultaneous perception of temperature, humidity, and oxygen content unaffected by strain interference. This easy on-chip preparation of hydrogel-based multimodal sensor array shows great potential for health and environment monitoring as artificial skin.
KW - flexible hydrogel sensors
KW - in situ electrochemical treatment
KW - multimodal artificial skin
KW - spatially controllable adhesion
KW - strain isolation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85195312478&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acsnano.4c02359
DO - 10.1021/acsnano.4c02359
M3 - 文章
C2 - 38830235
AN - SCOPUS:85195312478
SN - 1936-0851
VL - 18
SP - 15754
EP - 15768
JO - ACS Nano
JF - ACS Nano
IS - 24
ER -