Abstract Conductive porous composites are promising light‐weight materials for wearable electromechanical sensors, and oriented pores can further introduce an asymmetric structure, benefiting electromechanical conversion. This study addresses the limited conductivity and sensitivity of oriented porous MXene‐based sensors caused by MXene aggregation in thin cell walls. The key innovation involves a dimension‐hybrid nanofiller system combining one‐dimensional (1D) dielectric nanocellulose with two‐dimensional (2D) MXene sheets. Size‐matching rigid nanocellulose uniquely achieves effective MXene layer separation, mitigating conductive path disruption. At least 4 times greater conductivity improvement is obtained with size‐matching rigid nanocellulose, compared to short or flexible variants. The percolation threshold of MXene‐filled oriented porous materials lowers from 8.24 to 4.01 wt.%, improving the piezoresistive sensitivity by 5.61 times in a strain range of 0.56%–10%. Meanwhile, the separation based on dielectric particles establishes in situ parallel‐plane capacitors, working as a capacitance pressure transducer. Then, in a smaller strain range, the absent high sensitivity is supplemented by the deformation‐induced capacitance responsibility, with a detection strain limit as low as 0.17% in contact mode. The synergy of percolation threshold reduction and capacitance activation creates a dual‐response sensor covering extreme mechanical stimuli (from heavy loads to delicate touches), advancing lightweight wearable electronics through 2D material optimization strategies.
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Tingting Yang
Southwest University
Weiwei Chen
Henan Agricultural University
Yanrui Zou
Southwest Petroleum University
Advanced Functional Materials
Southwest University
Shihezi University
Chongqing Institute of Green and Intelligent Technology
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Yang et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68a368780a429f797332d578 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202514418
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