Electrostatically triggered autonomous self-healable and mechanically robust hydrogel in harsh environments for wearable electronics

Irum Firdous, Muhammad Fahim, Faheem Mushtaq, Walid A. Daoud*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

13 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The expeditious growth of self-healable multifunctional electronics poses a challenge on power devices to acquire fast autonomous self-healing of solids with efficient electrical recovery. However, realizing this goal remains elusive due to the sluggish dynamics of bonded ions. Herein, we overcome this limitation by introducing hydrogen bonding cluster and non-bonding electrostatic centers in solids to accelerate ion dynamics via more delocalization centers that can switch healing reformations at various physical states. As such, the matrix can retain fast autonomous self-healing characteristics in dry, aqueous, and freezing states via diffusion-less self-healing mechanism. The self-healable hydrogel renders a triboelectric nanogenerator on contact with skin with a power density of 11.1 W m–2 at a matching impedance as low as 9 MΩ, retaining 7.28 W m–2 in aqueous and 7.04 W m–2 freezing states, which outperforms all the reported self-healable induction devices. This diffusion-less approach of intrinsic switchable interaction is promising for robotics, sportswear, all weather prosthetics, cryogenics, and harsh weather power back-up applications. © 2023 Elsevier Ltd
Original languageEnglish
Article number108817
JournalNano Energy
Volume116
Online published23 Aug 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2023

Research Keywords

  • Autonomous self-healable hydrogel
  • Environment invariable device
  • Stretchable hydrogel
  • Transparent conductive electrode
  • Wearable triboelectric nanogenerator

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