It
is desired to create skin strain sensors composed of multifunctional
conductive hydrogels with excellent toughness and adhesion properties
to sustain cyclic loadings during use and facilitate the electrical
signal transmission. Herein, we prepared transparent, compliant, and
adhesive zwitterionic nanocomposite hydrogels with excellent mechanical
properties. The incorporated zwitterionic polymers can form interchain
dipole–dipole associations to offer additional physical cross-linking
of the network. The hydrogels show a high fracture elongation up to
2000%, a fracture strength up to 0.27 MPa, and a fracture toughness
up to 2.45 MJ/m3. Moreover, the reversible physical interaction
imparts the hydrogels with rapid self-healing ability without any
stimuli. The hydrogels are adhesive to many surfaces including polyelectrolyte
hydrogels, skin, glasses, silicone rubbers, and nitrile rubbers. The
presence of abundant zwitterionic groups facilitates ionic conductivity
in the hydrogels. The combination of these properties enables the
hydrogels to act as strain sensors with high sensitivity (gauge factor
= 1.8). The strategy to design the tough, adhesive, self-healable,
and conductive hydrogels as skin strain sensors by the zwitterionic
nanocomposite hydrogels is promising for practical applications.
Four 3-D coordination polymers of lanthanide with a tetra(amino acid) ligand, 1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradecane-1,4,8,11-tetrapropionic acid (H4L, 1), were synthesized. The structure of the Gd(III) complex was characterized. The fluorescence of the Eu(III) complex can be modulated by Ag+.
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