Cargando…

Dense Hydrogen-Bonding Network Boosts Ionic Conductive Hydrogels with Extremely High Toughness, Rapid Self-Recovery, and Autonomous Adhesion for Human-Motion Detection

The construction of ionic conductive hydrogels with high transparency, excellent mechanical robustness, high toughness, and rapid self-recovery is highly desired yet challenging. Herein, a hydrogen-bonding network densification strategy is presented for preparing a highly stretchable and transparent...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zhang, Bing, Zhang, Xu, Wan, Kening, Zhu, Jixin, Xu, Jingsan, Zhang, Chao, Liu, Tianxi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: AAAS 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8067885/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33997787
http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/2021/9761625
_version_ 1783682907041169408
author Zhang, Bing
Zhang, Xu
Wan, Kening
Zhu, Jixin
Xu, Jingsan
Zhang, Chao
Liu, Tianxi
author_facet Zhang, Bing
Zhang, Xu
Wan, Kening
Zhu, Jixin
Xu, Jingsan
Zhang, Chao
Liu, Tianxi
author_sort Zhang, Bing
collection PubMed
description The construction of ionic conductive hydrogels with high transparency, excellent mechanical robustness, high toughness, and rapid self-recovery is highly desired yet challenging. Herein, a hydrogen-bonding network densification strategy is presented for preparing a highly stretchable and transparent poly(ionic liquid) hydrogel (PAM-r-MVIC) from the perspective of random copolymerization of 1-methyl-3-(4-vinylbenzyl) imidazolium chloride and acrylamide in water. Ascribing to the formation of a dense hydrogen-bonding network, the resultant PAM-r-MVIC exhibited an intrinsically high stretchability (>1000%) and compressibility (90%), fast self-recovery with high toughness (2950 kJ m(−3)), and excellent fatigue resistance with no deviation for 100 cycles. Dissipative particle dynamics simulations revealed that the orientation of hydrogen bonds along the stretching direction boosted mechanical strength and toughness, which were further proved by the restriction of molecular chain movements ascribing to the formation of a dense hydrogen-bonding network from mean square displacement calculations. Combining with high ionic conductivity over a wide temperature range and autonomous adhesion on various surfaces with tailored adhesive strength, the PAM-r-MVIC can readily work as a highly stretchable and healable ionic conductor for a capacitive/resistive bimodal sensor with self-adhesion, high sensitivity, excellent linearity, and great durability. This study might provide a new path of designing and fabricating ionic conductive hydrogels with high mechanical elasticity, high toughness, and excellent fatigue resilience for skin-inspired ionic sensors in detecting complex human motions.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8067885
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher AAAS
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-80678852021-05-13 Dense Hydrogen-Bonding Network Boosts Ionic Conductive Hydrogels with Extremely High Toughness, Rapid Self-Recovery, and Autonomous Adhesion for Human-Motion Detection Zhang, Bing Zhang, Xu Wan, Kening Zhu, Jixin Xu, Jingsan Zhang, Chao Liu, Tianxi Research (Wash D C) Research Article The construction of ionic conductive hydrogels with high transparency, excellent mechanical robustness, high toughness, and rapid self-recovery is highly desired yet challenging. Herein, a hydrogen-bonding network densification strategy is presented for preparing a highly stretchable and transparent poly(ionic liquid) hydrogel (PAM-r-MVIC) from the perspective of random copolymerization of 1-methyl-3-(4-vinylbenzyl) imidazolium chloride and acrylamide in water. Ascribing to the formation of a dense hydrogen-bonding network, the resultant PAM-r-MVIC exhibited an intrinsically high stretchability (>1000%) and compressibility (90%), fast self-recovery with high toughness (2950 kJ m(−3)), and excellent fatigue resistance with no deviation for 100 cycles. Dissipative particle dynamics simulations revealed that the orientation of hydrogen bonds along the stretching direction boosted mechanical strength and toughness, which were further proved by the restriction of molecular chain movements ascribing to the formation of a dense hydrogen-bonding network from mean square displacement calculations. Combining with high ionic conductivity over a wide temperature range and autonomous adhesion on various surfaces with tailored adhesive strength, the PAM-r-MVIC can readily work as a highly stretchable and healable ionic conductor for a capacitive/resistive bimodal sensor with self-adhesion, high sensitivity, excellent linearity, and great durability. This study might provide a new path of designing and fabricating ionic conductive hydrogels with high mechanical elasticity, high toughness, and excellent fatigue resilience for skin-inspired ionic sensors in detecting complex human motions. AAAS 2021-04-15 /pmc/articles/PMC8067885/ /pubmed/33997787 http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/2021/9761625 Text en Copyright © 2021 Bing Zhang et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Exclusive Licensee Science and Technology Review Publishing House. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0).
spellingShingle Research Article
Zhang, Bing
Zhang, Xu
Wan, Kening
Zhu, Jixin
Xu, Jingsan
Zhang, Chao
Liu, Tianxi
Dense Hydrogen-Bonding Network Boosts Ionic Conductive Hydrogels with Extremely High Toughness, Rapid Self-Recovery, and Autonomous Adhesion for Human-Motion Detection
title Dense Hydrogen-Bonding Network Boosts Ionic Conductive Hydrogels with Extremely High Toughness, Rapid Self-Recovery, and Autonomous Adhesion for Human-Motion Detection
title_full Dense Hydrogen-Bonding Network Boosts Ionic Conductive Hydrogels with Extremely High Toughness, Rapid Self-Recovery, and Autonomous Adhesion for Human-Motion Detection
title_fullStr Dense Hydrogen-Bonding Network Boosts Ionic Conductive Hydrogels with Extremely High Toughness, Rapid Self-Recovery, and Autonomous Adhesion for Human-Motion Detection
title_full_unstemmed Dense Hydrogen-Bonding Network Boosts Ionic Conductive Hydrogels with Extremely High Toughness, Rapid Self-Recovery, and Autonomous Adhesion for Human-Motion Detection
title_short Dense Hydrogen-Bonding Network Boosts Ionic Conductive Hydrogels with Extremely High Toughness, Rapid Self-Recovery, and Autonomous Adhesion for Human-Motion Detection
title_sort dense hydrogen-bonding network boosts ionic conductive hydrogels with extremely high toughness, rapid self-recovery, and autonomous adhesion for human-motion detection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8067885/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33997787
http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/2021/9761625
work_keys_str_mv AT zhangbing densehydrogenbondingnetworkboostsionicconductivehydrogelswithextremelyhightoughnessrapidselfrecoveryandautonomousadhesionforhumanmotiondetection
AT zhangxu densehydrogenbondingnetworkboostsionicconductivehydrogelswithextremelyhightoughnessrapidselfrecoveryandautonomousadhesionforhumanmotiondetection
AT wankening densehydrogenbondingnetworkboostsionicconductivehydrogelswithextremelyhightoughnessrapidselfrecoveryandautonomousadhesionforhumanmotiondetection
AT zhujixin densehydrogenbondingnetworkboostsionicconductivehydrogelswithextremelyhightoughnessrapidselfrecoveryandautonomousadhesionforhumanmotiondetection
AT xujingsan densehydrogenbondingnetworkboostsionicconductivehydrogelswithextremelyhightoughnessrapidselfrecoveryandautonomousadhesionforhumanmotiondetection
AT zhangchao densehydrogenbondingnetworkboostsionicconductivehydrogelswithextremelyhightoughnessrapidselfrecoveryandautonomousadhesionforhumanmotiondetection
AT liutianxi densehydrogenbondingnetworkboostsionicconductivehydrogelswithextremelyhightoughnessrapidselfrecoveryandautonomousadhesionforhumanmotiondetection