Abstract

Over the past few years, wearable electronics and smart textiles have seen tremendous growth in both academia and industries. However, it is still a challenge to prepare robust, flexible, wearable, and multiresponsive textile electronics. A newly blooming two-dimensional (2D) transition-metal carbide/nitride (MXene) is regarded as an ideal active material to build multifunctional electronics due to its intriguing properties. Herein, a hydrophobic and multifunctional textile composite (Si-MAP) was prepared by decoration of conductive MXene nanosheets onto air-laid paper, followed by wrapping with poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS). These obtained smart textiles exhibited excellent electronic/photonic/mechanical triresponsive properties: Si-MAPs could reach high equilibrium temperatures (104.9 and 118.7 °C) under quite low power illumination (1.25 W cm-2) and working voltage (4 V). The Si-MAP pressure sensor exhibited high sensitivity and rapid response time (30-40 ms), which can capture a wide range of human movements. Moreover, the thin PDMS layer not only rendered the textile composites hydrophobic but also improved the stability and adaptation for daily use. Remarkably, the hydrophobic Si-MAPs have maintained the advantages of breathability and washability, which make them suitable for wearing. Thus, this smart Si-MAP textile provides a reference for the study of the next generation of light, portable, and wearable textile-based electronic devices.

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