Hydrogel-based wearable flexible pressure sensors have great promise in human health and motion monitoring. However, it remains a great challenge to significantly improve the toughness, sensitivity and stability of hydrogel...
Biomedical materials with outstanding biochemical and mechanical properties have great potential in tissue enginering, drug delivery, antibacterial, and implantable devices. Hydrogels have emerged as a most promising family of biomedical...
Early detection of metallic corrosion is one considerable method to reduce imperceptible disasters nowadays. Fluorescent coatings with high sensitivity and long lifetimes for use in the early detection of metallic corrosion are in high demand, but they are presently difficult to prepare. Inspired by the chameleon's skin, which is capable of switching its color in different atmospheres sensitively and reversibly, we proposed herein a facile and universal all-in-one strategy of combining the fluorescent sensitivity and dynamic hydrogen bonds in a hydrogel to develop a reusable corrosion detection tape to cover metal surfaces. The fluorescent hydrogel tape was constructed using free radical copolymerization of monomers [hydroxyethyl methylacrylate (HEMA) and tetraphenylethene derivatives (TPEPy)]. Due to the aggregation-induced emission (AIE) behavior of TPEPy, the poly-(HEMA-co-TPEPy) hydrogel is capable of monitoring the traces of corrosion via the release of ferric ions with a concentration as low as 10 −5 M. Moreover, due to the dynamic hydrogen bonds of hydroxyethyl groups in hydrogel networks, the fluorescent hydrogel tape exhibited good adhesion and well reusability for over 10 applications to effectively warn against early corrosion of stainless steel. This non-destructive and reversible method of early corrosion detection can provide valuable signals when maintenance is needed before the metal suffers serious damage.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.