Abstract

Building stimulus-responsive units in the hydrogel coatings remains challenging for film sensors consisting of alternated layers of inert substrates and hydrogel coatings. An interesting film sensor with a carboxymethyl starch-based hydrogel coating was developed here. The cross-linking networks of carboxymethyl starch play the roles of structure-constructing units and stimulus-controlling units simultaneously, endowing the coatings with thermal sensing and strain sensing capabilities. The dynamic cross-links formed via the boronic ester bonds are temperature-sensitive, releasing or consuming additional acid ions with temperature alteration, and also as primary networks give the hydrogel strength and stretchability with the assistance of semi-penetrated polyacrylamide chains. Therefore, as-prepared flexible film sensors can be used to detect the periodic changes of human temperature and small-scale motion with multiple working modes, discriminating the physical states related to human health. Moreover, this kind of starch-based coating is degradable in a strongly alkaline solution and the inert substrate layer can protect the skin from erosion caused by direct hydrogel-skin contact, and thereby the film sensor is human- and environmentally friendly. This work also proposes a strategy of building temperature-sensitive units in the film sensor via regulating the chemical networks, instead of tuning physical structures.

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