Moisture self-regulating ionic skins with ultra-long ambient stability for self-healing energy and sensing systems
Dehydration has been a key limiting factor for the operation of conductive hydrogels in practical application. Here, we report self-healable ionic skins that can self-regulate their internal moisture level by capturing extenral moistures via hygroscopic ion-coordinated polymer backbones through anti...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nano energy 2024-09, Vol.128, p.109858, Article 109858 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Dehydration has been a key limiting factor for the operation of conductive hydrogels in practical application. Here, we report self-healable ionic skins that can self-regulate their internal moisture level by capturing extenral moistures via hygroscopic ion-coordinated polymer backbones through antipolyelectrolyte effect. Results show the ionic skin can maintain its mechanical and electrical functions over 16 months in the ambient environment with high stretchability (fracture stretch ∼2216 %) and conductivity (23.5 mS/cm). The moisture self-regulating capability is further demonstrated by repeated exposures to harsh environments such as 200°C heating, freezing, and vacuum drying with recovered conductivity and stretchability. Their reversible ionic and hydrogen bonds also enable self-healing feature as a sample with the fully cut-through damage can restore its conductivity after 24 h at 40 % relative humidity. Utilizing the ionic skin as a building block, self-healing flexible piezoelecret sensors have been constructed to monitor physiological signals. Together with a facile transfer-printing process, a self-powered sensing system with a self-healable supercapacitor and humidity sensor has been successfully demonstrated. These results illustrate broad-ranging possibilities for the ionic skins in applications such as energy storage, wearable sensors, and human-machine interfaces.
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•The self-healing hydrogel achieves ultra-long operations (>16 months) in the ambient.•The hydrogel can self-replenish from ambient moisture to repeatedly recover from harsh environments.•Various devices were fabricated using ionic skins to construct self-powered systems. |
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ISSN: | 2211-2855 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.nanoen.2024.109858 |