Abstract

Electronic skin (e-skin) is considered as a highly promising interface for human-computer interaction systems and wearable electronic devices. Through elaborate design and assembly of various materials, it possesses multiple characteristics similar to human skin, including remarkable flexibility, stretchability, sensitivity to temperature and humidity, biocompatibility, and efficient interfacial ion/electron transport capabilities. Here, we innovatively integrate multifunctional carbon quantum dots (CQDs), which exhibit conductivity, antibacterial properties, ultraviolet absorption, and fluorescence emission, with poly(acrylic acid) and glycerin (Gly) into a three-dimensional network structure of natural goatskin collagen fibers. Through a top-down design strategy enhanced by hydrogen bond reconstruction, we successfully fabricated a novel transparent e-skin (PAC-eSkin). This e-skin exhibited significant tensile properties (4.94 MPa of tensile strength and 263.42% of a maximum breaking elongation), while also possessing Young's modulus similar to human skin (2.32 MPa). It is noteworthy that the functionalized CQDs used was derived from discarded goat hair, and the addition of Gly gave PAC-eSkin excellent antifreezing and moisturizing properties. Due to the presence of ultrasmall CQDs, which creates efficient ion/electron transport channels within PAC-eSkin, it could rapidly sense human motion and physiological signals (with a gauge factor (GF) of 1.88). Furthermore, PAC-eSkin had the potential to replace traditional electrode patches for real-time monitoring of electrocardiogram, electromyogram, and electrooculogram signals, with a higher SNR (signal-to-noise ratio) of 25.1 dB. Additionally, the customizable size and shape of PAC-eSkin offer vast possibilities for the construction of single-electrode triboelectric nanogenerator systems. We have reason to believe that the design and development of this transparent e-skin based on CQDs-functionalized dermal collagen matrices can pave a new way for innovations in human-computer interaction interfaces and their sensing application in diverse scenarios.

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