Abstract

Hydrogel-based wearable sensors have experienced an explosive development, whereas functional integration to mimic the multisignal responsiveness of skin especially for pressure and temperature remained a challenge. Herein, a functional ionic hydrogel-base flexible sensor was successfully prepared by integrating the thermal-sensitive N-isopropylacrylamide (NIPAAm) into another conductive double-network hydrogel based on polyvinyl alcohol-graphene oxide (PVA-GO) and polyacrylic acid-Fe3+ (PAA-Fe3+). Because of the multisynergistic network design, the triple-network hydrogel was endowed with excellent conductivity (∼170 Ω/mm), mechanical tolerance (1.1 MPa), and rapid recoverability (within 0.5 s), which demonstrated the potential use in pressure monitoring. Moreover, the introduction of a thermal-sensitive network allowed it to capture the changes in the human body temperature accurately simultaneously and to be further developed as a flexible temperature sensor. In particular, the unsynchronization of pressure and temperature strain (straining to stability within 0.5 s and more than 50 s, respectively) caused the two electrical signals to be automatically separated. Intuitive reading of data without involving complex parameter separation calculations allowed the hydrogel to be developed as an integrated dual temperature-pressure-sensitive flexible sensor. In addition, all above properties demonstrated that the as-prepared functional hydrogel could be extended to the practical application in human-machine interactions and personalized multisignal monitoring.

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