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The development of wearable electronic devices for human health monitoring requires materials with high mechanical performance and sensitivity. In this study, we present a novel transparent tissue-like ionogel-based wearable sensor based on silver nanowire-reinforced ionogel nanocomposites, P(AAm-co-AA) ionogel-Ag NWs composite. The composite exhibits a high stretchability of 605% strain and a moderate fracture stress of about 377 kPa. The sensor also demonstrates a sensitive response to temperature changes and electrostatic adsorption. By encapsulating the nanocomposite in a polyurethane transparent film dressing, we address issues such as skin irritation and enable multidirectional stretching. Measuring resistive changes of the ionogel nanocomposite in response to corresponding strain changes enables its utility as a highly stretchable wearable sensor with excellent performance in sensitivity, stability, and repeatability. The fabricated pressure sensor array exhibits great proficiency in stress distribution, capacitance sensing, and discernment of fluctuations in both external electric fields and stress. Our findings suggest that this material holds promise for applications in wearable and flexible strain sensors, temperature sensors, pressure sensors, and actuators.
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Siyuan Liu
Kunming University of Science and Technology
Yizhang Wu
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Lai Jiang
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
North Carolina State University
Applied Physical Sciences (United States)
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Liu et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e5dc44b6db64358757179a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.4c10539
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