| Literature DB >> 31246394 |
Van Tron Tran1, Md Tariful Islam Mredha1, Suraj Kumar Pathak1, Hyungsuk Yoon1,2, Jiaxi Cui3,4, Insu Jeon1.
Abstract
Conductive hydrogels are attracting increasing attention owing to their great potential for applications in flexible devices. For practical use, these high-water-content materials should not only show good conductivity but also be strong, stretchable, tough, and elastic. Herein, we describe a class of novel conductive tough hydrogels based on strong staggered Fe3+-carboxyl coordinating interactions. They are made from copolymers of acrylamide and N-acryloyl glutamic acid, a bidentate-based comonomer. The design of the staggered structure of Fe3+ and bidentate units is expected to enable energy dissipation and also results in a synergetic effect of two binding sites for fast self-recovery. We demonstrate that the equilibrated hydrogels with a water content of 53 wt % exhibit superior mechanical properties (e.g., highest tensile strength, 12.1 MPa; Young's modulus, 36.1 MPa; work of extension, 42.1 MJ m-3; fracture energy, 10,691 J m-2; compressive strength, 65.1 MPa at 98% strain without a macroscopic fracture) compared to the ion-coordinated hydrogels reported to date, including elasticity at small strain, fast self-recoverability at room temperature (∼25 °C), a high dielectric constant (k = 341-1395 at 100 kHz), and good electrical conductivity (0.0018-0.024 S cm-1). Given their extraordinary overall characteristics, we envision their potential applications in flexible electronic devices.Entities:
Keywords: conductive hydrogels; fast self-recovery; high dielectric constant; staggered structure; tough hydrogels
Year: 2019 PMID: 31246394 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.9b06478
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229