| Literature DB >> 31070272 |
Jonghwa Park1, Youngoh Lee1, Meredith H Barbee2, Soowon Cho1, Seungse Cho1, Ravi Shanker1, Jinyoung Kim1, Jinyoung Myoung1, Minsoo P Kim1, Chunggi Baig1, Stephen L Craig2, Hyunhyub Ko1.
Abstract
Biological tissues are multiresponsive and functional, and similar properties might be possible in synthetic systems by merging responsive polymers with hierarchical soft architectures. For example, mechanochromic polymers have applications in force-responsive colorimetric sensors and soft robotics, but their integration into sensitive, multifunctional devices remains challenging. Herein, a hierarchical nanoparticle-in-micropore (NP-MP) architecture in porous mechanochromic polymers, which enhances the mechanosensitivity and stretchability of mechanochromic electronic skins (e-skins), is reported. The hierarchical NP-MP structure results in stress-concentration-induced mechanochemical activation of mechanophores, significantly improving the mechanochromic sensitivity to both tensile strain and normal force (critical tensile strain: 50% and normal force: 1 N). Furthermore, the porous mechanochromic composites exhibit a reversible mechanochromism under a strain of 250%. This architecture enables a dual-mode mechanochromic e-skin for detecting static/dynamic forces via mechanochromism and triboelectricity. The hierarchical NP-MP architecture provides a general platform to develop mechanochromic composites with high sensitivity and stretchability.Entities:
Keywords: electronic skin; hierarchical structure; mechanochromic; mechanophore
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31070272 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201808148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849