JOURNAL ARTICLE

Environment-Resistant Organohydrogel-Based Sensor Enables Highly Sensitive Strain, Temperature, and Humidity Responses

Chengcheng CaiChiyu WenWeiqiang ZhaoShu TianYou LongXiangyu ZhangXiaojie SuiLei ZhangJing Yang

Year: 2022 Journal:   ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces Vol: 14 (20)Pages: 23692-23700   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

Conductive hydrogels have been extensively used in wearable skin sensors owing to their outstanding flexibility, tissuelike compliance, and biocompatibility. However, the dehydration and embrittlement of hydrogels can result in sensitivity loss or even invalidation, restraining their wearable applications in external environments, especially at low temperatures and in arid environments. Herein, an environment-resistant organohydrogel is developed for multifunctional sensors. A double-network organohydrogel based on hyaluronic acid and poly(acrylic acid-co-acrylamide) is developed, and glycerol is introduced into the organohydrogel network via a solvent displacement strategy. Owing to the water-locking effects of glycerol and tough polymeric backbone, the resultant organohydrogel not only exhibits stable tensibility but also maintains excellent flexibility and stable conductivity with the environment-resistant properties, including freezing resistance against -30 °C and moisture retention at 4% relative humidity in a high temperature of 60 °C. Moreover, a series of organohydrogel-based sensors and an array device are developed to achieve highly sensitive strain, temperature, and humidity responses and exhibit a high gauge factor of 10.79 in the strain-sensitive test. This work develops a universal ionic skin based on organohydrogels to be applied to wearable sensors for health monitoring.

Keywords:
Materials science Self-healing hydrogels Gauge factor Flexibility (engineering) Relative humidity Humidity Nanotechnology Chemical engineering Composite material Polymer chemistry

Metrics

69
Cited By
7.66
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
49
Refs
0.97
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Advanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Conducting polymers and applications
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Polymers and Plastics
Polydiacetylene-based materials and applications
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Organic Chemistry
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.