Self-healing and anti-freezing graphene-hydrogel-graphene sandwich strain sensor with ultrahigh sensitivity

Hydrogels with specially designed structures and adjustable properties have been considered as smart materials with multi-purpose application prospects, especially in the field of flexible sensors. However, most hydrogel-based sensors have low sensitivity, which inevitably affects their promotion in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of materials chemistry. B, Materials for biology and medicine Materials for biology and medicine, 2021-04, Vol.9 (13), p.388-396
Hauptverfasser: Wu, Lu, Fan, Mingshuai, Qu, Meijie, Yang, Shuaitao, Nie, Jia, Tang, Ping, Pan, Lujun, Wang, Hai, Bin, Yuezhen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Hydrogels with specially designed structures and adjustable properties have been considered as smart materials with multi-purpose application prospects, especially in the field of flexible sensors. However, most hydrogel-based sensors have low sensitivity, which inevitably affects their promotion in the market. Herein, a strain sensor comprising a poly(vinyl alcohol)/poly(acrylic acid) (PVA/PAA) hybrid hydrogel sandwiched between two graphene layers was successfully constructed in a facile way, and it exhibited many excellent properties including extremely high sensitivity. The incorporation of glycerol ensured the good flexibility and anti-freezing performance of the hydrogel-based sensor even at −15 °C. The dynamic coordination bonds in the hydrogel-based sensor endowed it with excellent self-healing properties. In particular, the sandwich-structured hydrogel sensor showed a very high gauge factor (GF) value of 39 at the strain of 50%, which is much higher than those of most ordinary hydrogel-based strain sensors. A super stable signal value after 5000 strain cycles and a very short response time of 274 ms guaranteed the long-term usability and sensitivity of the hydrogel-based sandwich sensor. More importantly, the hydrogel-based sandwich sensor could detect both large and tiny human motions accurately and instantly in a series of real-time monitoring experiments, showing great potential for intelligent wearable electronic devices. Hydrogels with specially designed structures and adjustable properties have been considered as smart materials with multi-purpose application prospects, especially in the field of flexible sensors.
ISSN:2050-750X
2050-7518
DOI:10.1039/d1tb00082a