608134 Ultrastretchable Conductive Polymer Complex As a Strain Sensor with a Repeatable Autonomous Self-Healing Ability

Tuesday, November 17, 2020
Sensors (T9) (Poster Gallery)
Yang Lu1, Zhongqi Liu2, Haoming Yan3, Qing Peng3, Ruigang Wang2, Mark E. Barkey4, Ju-Won Jeon5 and Evan K. Wujcik1, (1)Materials Engineering And Nanosensor [MEAN] Laboratory, Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, (2)Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering, The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, (3)Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, (4)Department of Aerospace Engineering and Mechanics, The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, (5)Department of Applied Chemistry, Kookmin University, Seoul, AL, Korea, Republic of (South)

Wearable strain sensors are essential for the realization of applications in the broad fields of remote healthcare monitoring, soft robots, and immersive gaming, among many others. These flexible sensors should be comfortably adhered to the skin and capable of monitoring human motions with high accuracy, as well as exhibiting excellent durability. However, it is challenging to develop electronic materials that possess the properties of skin - compliant, elastic, stretchable, and self-healable. This work demonstrates a new regenerative polymer complex composed of poly(2-acrylamido-2-methyl-1-propanesulfonic acid), polyaniline, and phytic acid as a skin-like electronic material. It exhibits ultrahigh stretchability (1935%), repeatable autonomous self-healing ability (repeating healing efficiency >98%), quadratic response to strain (R2 > 0.9998), and linear response to flexion bending (R2 > 0.9994), outperforming current reported wearable strain sensors. The deprotonated polyelectrolyte, multivalent anion, and doped conductive polymer, under ambient conditions, synergistically construct a regenerative dynamic network of polymer complex cross-linked by hydrogen bonds and electrostatic interactions, which enables ultrahigh stretchability and repeatable self-healing. Sensitive strain responsive geometric and piezoresistive mechanisms of the material owing to the homogeneous and viscoelastic nature provide excellent linear responses to omnidirectional tensile strain and bending deformations. Furthermore, this material is scalable and simple to process in an environmentally friendly manner, paving the way for the next-generation flexible electronics.

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