Abstract

Epidermal electronics have been developed with gas/sweat permeability for long-term wearable electrophysiological monitoring. However, the state-of-the-art breathable epidermal electronics ignore the sweat accumulation and immersion at the skin/device interface, resulting in serious degradation of the interfacial conformality and adhesion, leading to signal artifacts with unstable and inaccurate biopotential measurements. Here, the authors present an all-nanofiber-based Janus epidermal electrode endowed with directional sweat transport properties for artifact-free biopotential monitoring. The designed Janus multilayered membrane (≈15µm) of superhydrophilic-hydrolyzed-polyacrylonitrile (HPAN)/polyurethane (PU)/Ag nanowire (AgNW) can quickly (less than 5 s) drive sweat away from the skin/electrode interface while resisting its penetration in the reverse direction. Along with the medical adhesive (MA)-reinforced junction-nodes, the adhesion strength among the heterogeneous interfaces can be greatly enhanced for robust mechanical-electrical stability. Therefore, their measured on-body electromyography (EMG) and electrocardiography (ECG) signals are free of sweat artifacts with negligible degradation and baseline drift compared to commercial Ag/AgCl gel electrodes and hydrophilic textile electrodes. This work paves a way to design novel directional-sweat-permeable epidermal electronics that can be conformally attached under sweaty conditions for long-term biopotential monitoring and shows the potential to apply epidermal electronics to many challenging conditions.

Full Text
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