TY - JOUR
T1 - Antidehydration and Stable Mechanical Properties during the Phase Transition of the PNIPAM-Based Hydrogel for Body-Temperature-Monitoring Sensors
AU - Zhang, Xiaoyong
AU - Ding, Haoran
AU - Zhou, Yujia
AU - Li, Zhaozhao
AU - Bai, Yongping
AU - Zhang, Lidong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2024/11/13
Y1 - 2024/11/13
N2 - Poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) enhances the reversibility and responsiveness of wearable temperature-sensitive devices. However, an open question is whether and how the hydrogel design can prevent adhesive performance loss caused by phase-transition-induced dehydration and unstable mechanical properties between devices and human skin and reduce interfacial failure. Herein, a gelatin-mesh scaffold-based hydrogel (NAGP-Gel) is constructed to inhibit dehydration and volume change, leading to stable mechanical properties, superior adhesiveness, and thermal sensing sensitivity during the phase transition. NAGP-Gel enhances the polymer chains-water interaction and weakens the degree of aggregation of polymer chains-chains, improving antidehydration properties under 45 °C conditions that are higher than the lower critical solution temperature (LCST; i.e., ∼32 °C). The mesh scaffold greatly restricts the phase-transition-induced polymer chain movement and maintains the mechanical performance. In a 60 °C environment, the maximum water loss and volume retention ratio of NAGP-Gel are only 3.58% and 97.3%, respectively. Additionally, NAGP-Gel serves as a temperature sensor, producing a stable thermal-electrical signal within the LCST range. It also can be assembled into an electronic device enabling the transmission of information and recognition of sign language via Morse code. This work broadens the application of PNIPAM in constructing intelligent hydrogels and opens the door to exploring emerging hydrogels for temperature-monitoring applications.
AB - Poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) enhances the reversibility and responsiveness of wearable temperature-sensitive devices. However, an open question is whether and how the hydrogel design can prevent adhesive performance loss caused by phase-transition-induced dehydration and unstable mechanical properties between devices and human skin and reduce interfacial failure. Herein, a gelatin-mesh scaffold-based hydrogel (NAGP-Gel) is constructed to inhibit dehydration and volume change, leading to stable mechanical properties, superior adhesiveness, and thermal sensing sensitivity during the phase transition. NAGP-Gel enhances the polymer chains-water interaction and weakens the degree of aggregation of polymer chains-chains, improving antidehydration properties under 45 °C conditions that are higher than the lower critical solution temperature (LCST; i.e., ∼32 °C). The mesh scaffold greatly restricts the phase-transition-induced polymer chain movement and maintains the mechanical performance. In a 60 °C environment, the maximum water loss and volume retention ratio of NAGP-Gel are only 3.58% and 97.3%, respectively. Additionally, NAGP-Gel serves as a temperature sensor, producing a stable thermal-electrical signal within the LCST range. It also can be assembled into an electronic device enabling the transmission of information and recognition of sign language via Morse code. This work broadens the application of PNIPAM in constructing intelligent hydrogels and opens the door to exploring emerging hydrogels for temperature-monitoring applications.
KW - antidehydration
KW - hydrogels
KW - soft materials
KW - temperature response
KW - wearable sensors
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85208050808
U2 - 10.1021/acsami.4c15748
DO - 10.1021/acsami.4c15748
M3 - 文章
C2 - 39482995
AN - SCOPUS:85208050808
SN - 1944-8244
VL - 16
SP - 62776
EP - 62787
JO - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
JF - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
IS - 45
ER -