A Highly‐Adhesive and Self‐Healing Elastomer for Bio‐Interfacial Electrode

Stretchable electrodes are playing important roles in the measurement of bio‐electrical signals especially in wearable electronic devices. These electrodes usually adopt commercial elastomers such as polydimethylsiloxane or polystyrene‐ethylene‐butylene‐styrene as substrates, which result in poor st...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advanced functional materials 2021-01, Vol.31 (1), p.n/a
Hauptverfasser: Xu, Zhicheng, Chen, Litong, Lu, Liangliang, Du, Ruichun, Ma, Wencan, Cai, Yifeng, An, Xiaoming, Wu, Haomin, Luo, Qiong, Xu, Qiang, Zhang, Qiuhong, Jia, Xudong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Stretchable electrodes are playing important roles in the measurement of bio‐electrical signals especially in wearable electronic devices. These electrodes usually adopt commercial elastomers such as polydimethylsiloxane or polystyrene‐ethylene‐butylene‐styrene as substrates, which result in poor stability and reliability due to weak interfacial adhesion between electrodes and human skin. Here, dopamine is introduced into the hydrogen bonding based elastomer as pendent groups. The elastomer shows both mechanical strength and adhesion strength at the same time. It exhibits high stress at break (1.9 MPa) and high fracture strain (5100%). Significantly, it exhibits a high adhesive strength (≈62 kPa) and underwater adhesive strength (≈16 kPa) with epithelial tissue. Thus, a stretchable bio‐interfacial electrode is fabricated by spray‐coating silver nanowires on the elastic substrate, which is stretchable, self‐healable, and highly adhesive and suitable for electromyogram measurement. Dopamine and hydrogen bonding are introduced into a polymer to realize a highly adhesive and self‐healing elastomer. Based on the elastomer, a bio‐interfacial electrode is fabricated for electromyography tests.
ISSN:1616-301X
1616-3028
DOI:10.1002/adfm.202006432