Soft Matter 2018-04-11

Soft Electrodes Combining Hydrogel and Liquid Metal

Tim Shay, Orlin Velev, Michael D. Dickey

Index: 10.1039/C8SM00337H

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Soft and stretchable materials play an important role in the emerging fields of soft robotics, human-machine interfaces, and stretchable electronics. Hydrogels are compelling materials because they are soft, chemically tunable, biocompatible, and ionically conductive. As such, hydrogels have been used for skin mountable sensors, such as electrocardiogram (ECG) electrodes, and show promise in emerging devices as stretchable transparent electrodes. Ultimately, these types of devices interface the hydrogel with rigid metallic electrodes to connect with electronic circuitry. Here, we show it is possible to interface hydrogel with liquid metal (eutectic gallium indium, EGaIn) electrodes to create completely soft and deformable electrodes that can lower the overall resistance through the gel without altering its mechanical properties. As a case study, we created and tested electrodes for ECG monitoring. ECG electrodes require low impedance at biomedically relevant frequencies (1-50 Hz). Potentiostatic electrochemical impedance spectroscopy measurements show that capacitive effects at the hydrogel-EGaIn interface dominate the impedance at these low frequencies, yet can be reduced by interfacing the metal with acidic or basic hydrogels that remove the native oxide skin from the metal. Increasing the ionic strength of the hydrogel also helps lower the impedance of the metal-hydrogel electrodes. The resulting devices fabricated have signal-to-noise ratios that exceed commercial ECG electrodes. The softness of these hydrogels can be modified without compromising the electrical properties to create truly soft electrodes. Using liquid metal as an electrode for hydrogels represents a potential strategy of creating soft electrodes for various bioelectronic applications, e-skins, and next-generation soft robotics.

Latest Articles:

New insights into re-entrant melting of microgel particles by polymer-induced aggregation experiments

2018-04-11

[10.1039/C7SM01922J]

Modeling the free-radical polymerization of hexanediol diacrylate (HDDA): a molecular dynamics and graph theory approach

2018-04-11

[10.1039/C8SM00451J]

Synchronization in pairs of rotating active biomotors

2018-04-11

[10.1039/C8SM00022K]

Determine electrospun morphologies from the properties of protein-polymer solutions

2018-04-11

[10.1039/C7SM02203D]

Adsorption of phospholipids at oil/water interfaces during emulsification is controlled by stress relaxation and diffusion

2018-04-10

[10.1039/C8SM00005K]

More Articles...