Using xanthan gum and PEDOT:PSS to costabilize Ga droplets to synergistically improve the toughness and sensing performance of polyacrylamide hydrogels

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Abstract

Conductive hydrogels have attracted tremendous attention in fabricating flexible strain sensors as highly stretchable and biocompatible strain sensing materials. However, fabricating a multifunctional conductive hydrogel simultaneously with high toughness and high sensing performance for monitoring subtle strain is still a great challenge. Herein, we developed a new conductive hydrogel by using poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):polystyrene sulfonate (PEDOT:PSS) and xanthan gum (XG) costabilized soft Ga droplets as conductive materials and using the in situ synthesized and chemically crosslinked polyacrylamide (PAM) as the hydrogel matrix. The PEDOT:PSS simultaneously constitutes a rigid conductive network with Ga droplets, and XG constitutes a rigid sacrificial network. The Ga droplets simultaneously promote the in situ free radical synthesis and crosslinking of PAM at room temperature. The as-prepared XG-PEDOT-Ga-PAM hydrogel shows high toughness, good moldability and adhesiveness. XG-PEDOT-Ga-PAM hydrogel-based strain sensor shows a very high sensitivity (gauge factor = 12.6 in the strain range of 175%–300%), short response/recovery time (250 ms), low detection limit (<0.1%) and excellent durability (>500 cycles). The excellent sensing performance of the hydrogel-based strain sensor enabled it to be highly competent in accurately monitoring various human activities from subtle radial pulses to large-scale human joint bending.[Figure not available: see fulltext.]

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Lu, Q., Liu, W., Liu, X., Yu, D., Song, Z., Wang, H., … Ge, S. (2023). Using xanthan gum and PEDOT:PSS to costabilize Ga droplets to synergistically improve the toughness and sensing performance of polyacrylamide hydrogels. Science China Materials, 66(9), 3723–3734. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40843-023-2524-4

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