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Wearable, Healable, and Adhesive Epidermal Sensors Assembled from Mussel-Inspired Conductive Hybrid Hydrogel Framework

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TLDR
In this paper, conductive, adhesive, wearable, and soft human-motion sensors are successfully assembled from conductive and human-friendly hybrid hydrogels with reliable self-healing capability and robust self-adhesiveness.
Abstract
Healable, adhesive, wearable, and soft human-motion sensors for ultrasensitive human–machine interaction and healthcare monitoring are successfully assembled from conductive and human-friendly hybrid hydrogels with reliable self-healing capability and robust self-adhesiveness. The conductive, healable, and self-adhesive hybrid network hydrogels are prepared from the delicate conformal coating of conductive functionalized single-wall carbon nanotube (FSWCNT) networks by dynamic supramolecular cross-linking among FSWCNT, biocompatible polyvinyl alcohol, and polydopamine. They exhibit fast self-healing ability (within 2 s), high self-healing efficiency (99%), and robust adhesiveness, and can be assembled as healable, adhesive, and soft human-motion sensors with tunable conducting channels of pores for ions and framework for electrons for real time and accurate detection of both large-scale and tiny human activities (including bending and relaxing of fingers, walking, chewing, and pulse). Furthermore, the soft human-motion sensors can be enabled to wirelessly monitor the human activities by coupling to a wireless transmitter. Additionally, the in vitro cytotoxicity results suggest that the hydrogels show no cytotoxicity and can facilitate cell attachment and proliferation. Thus, the healable, adhesive, wearable, and soft human-motion sensors have promising potential in various wearable, wireless, and soft electronics for human–machine interfaces, human activity monitoring, personal healthcare diagnosis, and therapy.

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Mussel-Inspired Cellulose Nanocomposite Tough Hydrogels with Synergistic Self-Healing, Adhesive, and Strain-Sensitive Properties

TL;DR: Li et al. as discussed by the authors designed a self-healing and self-adhesive ionic gel by constructing synergistic multiple coordination bonds among tannic acid-coated cellulose nanocrystals (TA@CNCs), poly(acrylic acid) chains, and metal ions in a covalent polymer network.
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Highly Stretchable and Biocompatible Strain Sensors Based on Mussel-Inspired Super-Adhesive Self-Healing Hydrogels for Human Motion Monitoring.

TL;DR: A novel hydrogel was synthesized by incorporating polydopamine-coated talc (PDA-talc) nanoflakes into a polyacrylamide (PAM)Hydrogel inspired by the natural mussel adhesive mechanism, which displayed strong adhesiveness to various substrates, including human skin, and the adhesion strength surpassed that of commercial double-sided tape and glue sticks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stimuli-Responsive Conductive Nanocomposite Hydrogels with High Stretchability, Self-Healing, Adhesiveness, and 3D Printability for Human Motion Sensing.

TL;DR: The presented nanocomposite hydrogels displayed good electrical conductivity, rapid self-healing and adhesive properties, flexible and stretchable mechanical properties, and high sensitivity to near-infrared light and temperature.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

High performance flexible strain sensor based on self-locked overlapping graphene sheets

TL;DR: A novel and flexible strain sensor with high performance based on self-locked overlapping graphene sheets (SOGS) which can be used for wearable devices and can exhibit great potential in wearable electronics because of its good balance between high sensitivity and large strain.
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Self-Powered Piezoionic Strain Sensor toward the Monitoring of Human Activities

TL;DR: A flexible wearable piezoionic strain sensor based on the ionic polymer membrane sandwiched between two conductive electrodes is developed and succeeded in monitoring the diverse human activities ranging from complex large scale multidimensional motions to subtle signals.
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Enhancing the Sensitivity of Percolative Graphene Films for Flexible and Transparent Pressure Sensor Arrays

TL;DR: In this paper, the performance of Graphene-based percolative strain gauges is investigated and guidelines to improve the durability and sensitivity of graphene films as sensing elements are developed.
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Skin-mountable stretch sensor for wearable health monitoring

TL;DR: This work presents a wrinkled Platinum strain sensor with tunable strain sensitivity for applications in wearable health monitoring and the possibility of using such a sensor for real-time respiratory monitoring by measuring chest wall displacement and correlating with lung volume is demonstrated.
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Wide-Range Strain Sensors Based on Highly Transparent and Supremely Stretchable Graphene/Ag-Nanowires Hybrid Structures.

TL;DR: A novel transparent, bendable, stretchable, and wide-range strain sensor based on a sandwich-like stacked graphene and Ag-nanowires hybrid structures is reported, capable to sense strains between 5% and 200%, and the response time for this sensation is <1 ms.
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