Issue 11, 2023, Issue in Progress

PSS-dispersed dopamine triggered formation of PAA adhesive hydrogel as flexible wearable sensors

Abstract

Catechol-based hydrogels have good adhesion properties; however, since the concentration of catechol is low and it can be easily oxidized to quinone, the adhesion performance of the hydrogels is reduced, which limits their application as self-adhesive flexible wearable sensors. In this work, a dopamine: poly(sodium 4-styrenesulfonate) (DA:PSS)-initiated strategy was proposed to construct adhesive hydrogels, where the semiquinone radicals present in DA:PSS were used to initiate radical polymerization to obtain the DA:PSS/poly(acrylic acid) (DA:PSS/PAA) hydrogel. This hydrogel exhibited good stretchability and adhesion with various substrates. We observed that, even after exposure to air for 21 days under certain relative humidity (76%), the catechol groups hardly oxidized and the DA:PSS/PAA hydrogel presented good adhesion. The DA:PSS/PAA hydrogel also showed good electrical conductivity and fast response ability. Thus, the general strategy of triggering monomer polymerization to form hydrogels based on the semiquinone radical present in DA:PSS offers great potential for their application in flexible electronic devices and wearable sensors.

Graphical abstract: PSS-dispersed dopamine triggered formation of PAA adhesive hydrogel as flexible wearable sensors

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
15 Nov 2022
Accepted
27 Feb 2023
First published
08 Mar 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2023,13, 7561-7568

PSS-dispersed dopamine triggered formation of PAA adhesive hydrogel as flexible wearable sensors

X. He, N. Wen, W. Zhang, S. He, S. Yang, X. Li, C. Chen and F. Zuo, RSC Adv., 2023, 13, 7561 DOI: 10.1039/D2RA07243B

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