Peptidoglycan-inspired autonomous ultrafast self-healing bio-friendly elastomers for bio-integrated electronics
Author(s) -
Luzhi Zhang,
Jia-Hui Liang,
Chenyu Jiang,
Zenghe Liu,
Lijie Sun,
Shuo Chen,
Huixia Xuan,
Dong Lei,
Qingbao Guan,
Xiaofeng Ye,
Zhengwei You
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
national science review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.433
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 2095-5138
pISSN - 2053-714X
DOI - 10.1093/nsr/nwaa154
Subject(s) - elastomer , materials science , biocompatibility , nanotechnology , self healing , electronics , stretchable electronics , biocompatible material , composite material , biomedical engineering , chemistry , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology , metallurgy
Elastomers are essential for stretchable electronics, which have become more and more important in bio-integrated devices. To ensure high compliance with the application environment, elastomers are expected to resist, and even self-repair, mechanical damage, while being friendly to the human body. Herein, inspired by peptidoglycan, we designed the first room-temperature autonomous self-healing biodegradable and biocompatible elastomers, poly(sebacoyl 1,6-hexamethylenedicarbamate diglyceride) (PSeHCD) elastomers. The unique structure including alternating ester-urethane moieties and bionic hybrid crosslinking endowed PSeHCD elastomers superior properties including ultrafast self-healing, tunable biomimetic mechanical properties, facile reprocessability, as well as good biocompatibility and biodegradability. The potential of the PSeHCD elastomers was demonstrated as a super-fast self-healing stretchable conductor (21 s) and motion sensor (2 min). This work provides a new design and synthetic principle of elastomers for applications in bio-integrated electronics.
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