Litcius/Paper detail

Self-Healing, Electrically Conductive, Antibacterial, and Adhesive Eutectogel Containing Polymerizable Deep Eutectic Solvent for Human Motion Sensing and Wound Healing

Shaghayegh Vakili, Zahra Mohamadnia, Ebrahim Ahmadi

2024Biomacromolecules40 citationsDOI

Abstract

Flexible electronic devices such as wearable sensors are essential to advance human–machine interactions. Conductive eutectogels are promising for wearable sensors, despite their challenges in self-healing and adhesion properties. This study introduces a multifunctional eutectogel based on a novel polymerizable deep eutectic solvent (PDES) prepared by the incorporation of diallyldimethylammonium chloride (DADMAC) and glycerol in the presence of polycyclodextrin (PCD)/dopamine-grafted gelatin (Gel-DOP)/oxidized sodium alginate (OSA). The synthesized eutectogel has reversible Schiff-base bonds, hydrogen bonds, and host–guest interactions, which enable rapid self-healing upon network disruption. GPDO-15 eutectogel has significant tissue adhesion, high stretchability (419%), good ionic conductivity (0.79 mS·cm –1 ), and favorable antibacterial and self-healing properties. These eutectogels achieve 90% antibacterial effect, show excellent biocompatibility, and can be used as sensors to monitor human activities with strong stability and durability. The in vivo studies indicate that the eutectogels can improve the wound healing process which makes them an effective option for biological dressings.

Topics & Concepts

Deep eutectic solventWound healingAdhesiveSelf-healingSolventEutectic systemMaterials scienceElectrically conductiveChemistryPolymer chemistryBiomedical engineeringNanotechnologyComposite materialOrganic chemistrySurgeryMedicineAlternative medicineLayer (electronics)AlloyPathologyConducting polymers and applicationsAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting MaterialsPolydiacetylene-based materials and applications