Literature DB >> 31536330

Silk-Based Advanced Materials for Soft Electronics.

Chunya Wang1,2, Kailun Xia1, Yingying Zhang1, David L Kaplan2.   

Abstract

Soft bioelectronics that could be integrated with soft and curvilinear biological tissues/organs have attracted multidisciplinary research interest from material scientists, electronic engineers, and biomedical scientists. Because of their potential human health-related applications, soft bioelectronics require stringent demands for biocompatible components. Silk, as a kind of well-known ancient natural biopolymer, shows unique combined merits such as good biocompatibility, programmable biodegradability, processability into various material formats, and large-scale sustainable production. Such unique merits have made silk popular for intensive design and study in soft bioelectronics over the past decade. Due to the development of fabrication techniques in material processing and progress in research, silk has been engineered into a variety of advanced materials including silk fibers/textiles, nanofibers, films, hydrogels, and aerogels. Natural and regenerated silk materials can also be transformed into intrinsically nitrogen-doped and electrically conductive carbon materials, due to their unique molecular structure and high nitrogen content. The rich morphologies and varied processing options for silk materials can furnish transformed carbon materials with well-designed structures and properties. The favorable and unique material merits of silk materials and silk-derived carbon materials offer potential applications in soft electronics. Based on commercial silk fibers/textiles and the availability of re-engineered silk materials with versatile technological formats, functional soft electronics have been explored with silk as flexible biosupports/biomatrixes or active components. These soft systems include bioresorbable electronics, ultraconformal bioelectronics, transient electronics, epidermal electronics, textile electronics, conformal biosensors, flexible transistors, and resistive switching memory devices. Silk-derived carbon materials with rationally designed morphologies and structures have also been developed as active components for wearable sensors, electronic skins, and flexible energy devices, which provide novel concepts and opportunities for soft electronics. In this Account, we highlight the unique hierarchical and chemical structure of natural silk fibers, the fabrication strategies for processing silk into materials with versatile morphologies and into electrically conductive carbon materials, as well as recent progress in the development of silk-based advanced materials (silk materials and silk-derived carbon materials) for soft bioelectronics. The design and functionality of soft electronics developed with commercial silk fibers/textiles, re-engineered silk materials, and silk-derived carbon materials as biosubstrate/matrix and active components is introduced in detail. We further discuss future challenges and prospects for developing silk-based soft bioelectronics for wearable healthcare systems. By leveraging the unique advantages of silk-based advanced materials, the design and construction strategy for flexible electronics, as well as the potential of flexible electronics for conformable and intimate association with human tissues/organs, silk-based soft bioelectronics should have a significant impact on diverse healthcare fields.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31536330     DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.9b00333

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  18 in total

1.  Tunable Protein Hydrogels: Present State and Emerging Development.

Authors:  J Nie; X Zhang; W Wang; J Ren; A-P Zeng
Journal:  Adv Biochem Eng Biotechnol       Date:  2021       Impact factor: 2.635

Review 2.  From Silk Spinning to 3D Printing: Polymer Manufacturing using Directed Hierarchical Molecular Assembly.

Authors:  Xuan Mu; Vincent Fitzpatrick; David L Kaplan
Journal:  Adv Healthc Mater       Date:  2020-02-28       Impact factor: 9.933

Review 3.  Recent Progress in Materials Chemistry to Advance Flexible Bioelectronics in Medicine.

Authors:  Gaurav Balakrishnan; Jiwoo Song; Chenchen Mou; Christopher J Bettinger
Journal:  Adv Mater       Date:  2022-01-27       Impact factor: 30.849

Review 4.  Fiber-Based Biopolymer Processing as a Route toward Sustainability.

Authors:  Chunmei Li; Junqi Wu; Haoyuan Shi; Zhiyu Xia; Jugal Kishore Sahoo; Jingjie Yeo; David L Kaplan
Journal:  Adv Mater       Date:  2021-10-13       Impact factor: 30.849

Review 5.  Engineered Living Hydrogels.

Authors:  Xinyue Liu; Maria Eugenia Inda; Yong Lai; Timothy K Lu; Xuanhe Zhao
Journal:  Adv Mater       Date:  2022-04-24       Impact factor: 32.086

6.  Synthesis and Characterization of Silk Ionomers for Layer-by-Layer Electrostatic Deposition on Individual Mammalian Cells.

Authors:  Onur Hasturk; Jugal Kishore Sahoo; David L Kaplan
Journal:  Biomacromolecules       Date:  2020-06-24       Impact factor: 6.988

7.  Conductive In Situ Reduced Graphene Oxide-Silk Fibroin Bionanocomposites.

Authors:  Parushuram Nilogal; Gauthama B Uppine; Ranjana Rayaraddi; Harisha K Sanjeevappa; Lavita J Martis; Badiadka Narayana; Sangappa Yallappa
Journal:  ACS Omega       Date:  2021-05-11

Review 8.  Nature-derived materials for the fabrication of functional biodevices.

Authors:  S Pradhan; A K Brooks; V K Yadavalli
Journal:  Mater Today Bio       Date:  2020-06-12

Review 9.  Sustainable Natural Bio-Origin Materials for Future Flexible Devices.

Authors:  Lingyi Lan; Jianfeng Ping; Jiaqing Xiong; Yibin Ying
Journal:  Adv Sci (Weinh)       Date:  2022-03-24       Impact factor: 17.521

10.  Fabrication of Silk Fibroin/Graphene Film with High Electrical Conductivity and Humidity Sensitivity.

Authors:  Haoran Zhang; Juntao Zhao; Tieling Xing; Shenzhou Lu; Guoqiang Chen
Journal:  Polymers (Basel)       Date:  2019-10-28       Impact factor: 4.329

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