posted on 2023-12-12, 21:03authored byXiaoyu Cui, Chengjing Miao, Shaowei Lu, Xingmin Liu, Yuxuan Yang, Jingchao Sun
Designing
flexible wearable sensors with a wide sensing range,
high sensitivity, and high stability is a vulnerable research direction
with a futuristic field to study. In this paper, Ti3C2Tx MXene/carbon nanotube (CNT)/thermoplastic
polyurethane (TPU)/polysulfone (PSF) composite films with excellent
sensor performance were obtained by self-assembly of conductive fillers
in TPU/PSF porous films with an asymmetric structure through vacuum
filtration, and the porous films were prepared by the phase inversion
method. The composite films consist of the upper part with finger-like
“cavities” filled by MXene/CNTs, which reduces the microcracks
in the conductive network during the tensile process, and the lower
part has smaller apertures of a relatively dense resin cortex assisting
the recovery process. The exclusive layer structure of the MXene/CNTs/TPU/PSF
film sensor, with a thickness of 46.95 μm, contains 0.0339 mg/cm2 single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) and 0.348 mg/cm2 MXene only, providing functional range (0–80.7%),
high sensitivity (up to 1265.18), and excellent stability and durability
(stable sensing under 2300 fatigue tests, viable to the initial resistance),
endurably cycled under large strains with serious damage to the conductive
network. Finally, the MXene/CNTs/TPU/PSF film sensor is usable for
monitoring pulse, swallow, tiptoe, and various joint bends in real
time and distributing effective electrical signals. This paper implies
that the MXene/CNTs/TPU/PSF film sensor has broad prospects in pragmatic
applications.