JOURNAL ARTICLE

Conductive Hydrogels with Ultrastretchability and Adhesiveness for Flame- and Cold-Tolerant Strain Sensors

Cuiwen LiuRu ZhangPei-Wen LiJinqing QuPengjie ChaoZong‐Wen MoTao YangNing QingLiuyan Tang

Year: 2022 Journal:   ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces Vol: 14 (22)Pages: 26088-26098   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

Hydrogel strain sensors with extreme temperature tolerance have recently gained great attention. However, the sensing ability of these hydrogel strain sensors changes with temperature, resulting in the variety of output signals that causes signal distortion. In this study, double-network hydrogels comprising SiO2 nanoparticles composed of polyacrylamide and phytic acid-doped polypyrrole were prepared and applied on strain sensors with a wide sensing range, high adhesiveness, and invariable strain sensitivity under flame and cold environments. The hydrogels had stable conductivity, excellent adhesive strength of up to 79.7 kPa on various substrates, and high elongation of up to 1896% at subzero temperature and after heating. They also exhibited effective flame retardancy with low surface temperature (71.2 °C) after 1200 s of heating (200 °C) and antifreezing properties at a low temperature of -20 °C. Remarkably, even under cold temperature and heat treatment, the hydrogel-based strain sensor displayed consistent sensing behaviors in detecting human motions with a broad strain range (up to 500%) and steady gauge factor (GF, ∼2.90). Therefore, this work paves the way for the applications of hydrogel sensors in robotic skin, human-mechanical interfaces, and health monitoring devices under harsh operating environments.

Keywords:
Materials science Self-healing hydrogels Gauge factor Strain (injury) Conductivity Atmospheric temperature range Composite material Electrical conductor Nanotechnology Fabrication Polymer chemistry

Metrics

51
Cited By
5.55
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
50
Refs
0.95
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

Related Documents

© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.