Abstract

On-skin electronics based on impermeable elastomers and stacking structures often suffer from inferior sweat-repelling capabilities and severe mechanical mismatch between sub-layers employed, which significantly impedes their lengthy wearing comfort and functionality. Herein, inspired by the transpiration system of vascular plants and the water diode phenomenon, a hierarchical nonwoven electronic textile (E-textile) with multi-branching microfibers and robust interlayer adhesion is rationally developed. The layer-by-layer electro-airflow spinning method and selective oxygen plasma treatment are utilized to yield a porosity-hydrophilicity dual-gradient. The resulting E-textile shows unidirectional, nonreversible, and anti-gravity water transporting performance even upon large-scale stretching (250%), excellent mechanical matching between sub-layers, as well as a reversible color-switching ability to visualize body temperature. More importantly, the conducting and skin-conformal E-textile demonstrates accurate and stable detecting capability for biomechanical and bioelectrical signals when applied as an on-skin bioelectrode, including different human activities, electrocardiography, electromyogram, and electrodermal activity signals. Further, the E-textile can be efficiently implemented in human-machine interfaces to build a gesture-controlled dustbin and a smart acousto-optic alarm. Hence, this hierarchically-designed E-textile with integrated functionalities offers a practical and innovative method for designing comfortable and daily applicable on-skin electronics.

Full Text
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