Yixuan Lu, Haifeng Zhou, Wenchao Zhao, Jiali Jiang, Jifu Du, Long Zhao
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Natural polymer-based hydrogels have found extensive use in flexible sensing, energy storage, and other fields because of their environmental sustainability and biocompatibility. Nonetheless, numerous challenges persist in the development of hydrogels with outstanding conductivity solely from natural polymers. Herein, we have successfully synthesized hydrogels based on natural polymer (tragacanth gum) and ionic liquids (1-vinyl-3-ethylimidazolium bromide) using a convenient and efficient one-step ionizing radiation method (TG/PIL hydrogels). The TG/PIL hydrogels exhibit high ionic conductivity (7.1 S m-1 at 25 °C), and can be used for multimodal sensors, including strain and temperature sensors. It has exceptional capabilities in monitoring human motor behavior, capturing subtle facial expressions and pulses beat. TG/PIL hydrogel can also accurately sense changes in the temperature of the external environment, and have significant thermal sensitivity within the range of 40 to 60 °C (-3.22 % /°C). Furthermore, the high conductivity of TG/PIL hydrogels enables them to exhibit outstanding performance in supercapacitor electrolytes, it has good stability in a certain load bearing range, temperature range, folding angle range. This work offers a straightforward technique for creating a multimodal hydrogel sensor, with promising applications in flexible wearable devices, energy storage, and beyond.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Biological Macromolecules is a well-established international journal dedicated to research on the chemical and biological aspects of natural macromolecules. Focusing on proteins, macromolecular carbohydrates, glycoproteins, proteoglycans, lignins, biological poly-acids, and nucleic acids, the journal presents the latest findings in molecular structure, properties, biological activities, interactions, modifications, and functional properties. Papers must offer new and novel insights, encompassing related model systems, structural conformational studies, theoretical developments, and analytical techniques. Each paper is required to primarily focus on at least one named biological macromolecule, reflected in the title, abstract, and text.