JOURNAL ARTICLE

MXene-Mediated Cellulose Conductive Hydrogel with Ultrastretchability and Self-Healing Ability

Huixiong WanYu ChenYongzhen TaoPan ChenSen WangXueyu JiangAng Lu

Year: 2023 Journal:   ACS Nano Vol: 17 (20)Pages: 20699-20710   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

Constructing natural polymers such as cellulose, chitin, and chitosan into hydrogels with excellent stretchability and self-healing properties can greatly expand their applications but remains very challenging. Generally, the polysaccharide-based hydrogels have suffered from the trade-off between stiffness of the polysaccharide and stretchability due to the inherent nature. Thus, polysaccharide-based hydrogels (polysaccharides act as the matrix) with self-healing properties and excellent stretchability are scarcely reported. Here, a solvent-assisted strategy was developed to construct MXene-mediated cellulose conductive hydrogels with excellent stretchability (∼5300%) and self-healability. MXene (an emerging two-dimensional nanomaterial) was introduced as emerging noncovalent cross-linking sites between the solvated cellulose chains in a benzyltrimethylammonium hydroxide aqueous solution. The electrostatic interaction between the cellulose chains and terminal functional groups (O, OH, F) of MXene led to cross-linking of the cellulose chains by MXene to form a hydrogel. Due to the excellent properties of the cellulose-MXene conductive hydrogel, the work not only enabled their strong potential in both fields of electronic skins and energy storage but provided fresh ideas for some other stubborn polymers such as chitin to prepare hydrogels with excellent properties.

Keywords:
Self-healing hydrogels Cellulose Materials science Chitosan Polymer Chemical engineering Chitin Aqueous solution Polysaccharide Nanomaterials Polymer chemistry Nanotechnology Chemistry Composite material Organic chemistry

Metrics

103
Cited By
16.36
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
88
Refs
0.99
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
MXene and MAX Phase Materials
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
Dielectric materials and actuators
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.