Wearable strain sensors are essential for the realization of applications in the broad fields of remote healthcare monitoring, soft robots, and immersive gaming, among many others. These flexible sensors should be comfortably adhered to the skin and capable of monitoring human motions with high accuracy, as well as exhibiting excellent durability. However, it is challenging to develop electronic materials that possess the properties of skincompliant, elastic, stretchable, and self-healable. This work demonstrates a new regenerative polymer complex composed of poly(2-acrylamido-2-methyl-1-propanesulfonic acid), polyaniline, and phytic acid as a skin-like electronic material. It exhibits ultrahigh stretchability (1935%), repeatable autonomo...
Intelligent skinlike materials have recently attracted tremendous research interests for employing i...
Self-healing materials can prolong the lifetime of structures and products by enabling the repairing...
Extremely stretchable self‐healing strain sensors based on conductive hydrogels are successfully fab...
Wearable strain sensors are essential for the realization of applications in the broad fields of rem...
There is a growing interest in developing stretchable strain sensors to quantify the large mechanica...
A stretchable and self-healable conductive material with high conductivity is critical to high-perfo...
Biocompatible conductive hydrogels with intrinsic flexibility, high sensitivity, linearity and outst...
Stretchable ionic skins are intriguing in mimicking the versatile sensations of natural skins. Howev...
Skin-like sensory devidces shoud be stretchable and self-healable to meet the demands for future ele...
Electronic skin devices capable of monitoring physiological signals and displaying feedback informat...
Electronic sensors capable of capturing mechanical deformation are highly desirable for the next gen...
Self-healing materials can prolong the lifetime of structures and products by enabling the repairing...
To mimic the velocity-sensitive ability of the human skin, we fabricate a class of “solid–liquid” el...
Stretchable and wearable sensors with active response to various environmental stimuli possess numer...
Currently, stretchable hydrogel has attracted great attention in the field of wearable flexible sens...
Intelligent skinlike materials have recently attracted tremendous research interests for employing i...
Self-healing materials can prolong the lifetime of structures and products by enabling the repairing...
Extremely stretchable self‐healing strain sensors based on conductive hydrogels are successfully fab...
Wearable strain sensors are essential for the realization of applications in the broad fields of rem...
There is a growing interest in developing stretchable strain sensors to quantify the large mechanica...
A stretchable and self-healable conductive material with high conductivity is critical to high-perfo...
Biocompatible conductive hydrogels with intrinsic flexibility, high sensitivity, linearity and outst...
Stretchable ionic skins are intriguing in mimicking the versatile sensations of natural skins. Howev...
Skin-like sensory devidces shoud be stretchable and self-healable to meet the demands for future ele...
Electronic skin devices capable of monitoring physiological signals and displaying feedback informat...
Electronic sensors capable of capturing mechanical deformation are highly desirable for the next gen...
Self-healing materials can prolong the lifetime of structures and products by enabling the repairing...
To mimic the velocity-sensitive ability of the human skin, we fabricate a class of “solid–liquid” el...
Stretchable and wearable sensors with active response to various environmental stimuli possess numer...
Currently, stretchable hydrogel has attracted great attention in the field of wearable flexible sens...
Intelligent skinlike materials have recently attracted tremendous research interests for employing i...
Self-healing materials can prolong the lifetime of structures and products by enabling the repairing...
Extremely stretchable self‐healing strain sensors based on conductive hydrogels are successfully fab...