Biological skin-inspired damage warning and self-healing thermoelectric aerogel fiber via coaxial wet spinning for wearable temperature sensing
Article
| Article Title | Biological skin-inspired damage warning and self-healing thermoelectric aerogel fiber via coaxial wet spinning for wearable temperature sensing |
|---|---|
| ERA Journal ID | 4724 |
| Article Category | Article |
| Authors | He, Hualing, Jiang, Qing, Wan, Yuhang, Mia, Md Hasib, Qu, Xueru, Zhou, Mi, He, Xingyu, Li, Xiaoqian, Hong, Min, Yu, Zhicai and Huo, Siqi |
| Journal Title | Journal of Materials Science and Technology |
| Journal Citation | 250, pp. 257-271 |
| Number of Pages | 15 |
| Year | 2026 |
| Publisher | Elsevier |
| Place of Publication | China |
| ISSN | 1005-0302 |
| Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmst.2025.06.038 |
| Web Address (URL) | https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S100503022500756X |
| Abstract | Biopolymer-based temperature-sensing fibers are increasingly employed to realize the eco-friendly concept of wearable electronics. However, keeping their long-term development remains challenging due to limited mechanical robustness and poor environmental tolerance. Herein, a bionic autonomous self-healing thermoelectric (TE) aerogel fiber with visual damage warning function (STDF) inspired by biological skin was prepared via a coaxial wet spinning strategy, which yielded a core-shell heterogeneous structure with a protective sheath with an intrinsic self-healing ability and a temperature-sensing core layer. The core layer of STDF, composed of flexible thermoplastic polyurethane embedded with rigid Ti3C2Tx MXene, effectively minimizes disruptions in continuous conductive pathways during repeated extreme bending. Featuring a synergistic network of reversible hydrogen bonds and dynamic Schiff-base linkages constructed among oxidized alginate, sericin, and tannic acid, the fractured STDF aerogel fiber exhibits exceptional water-responsive self-healing efficiency (97.51 % stress recovery). Moreover, the visual damage location in STDF fiber is enabled through a coloration reaction at the damaged interface between the Fe2+ ions and 1,10-phenanthroline incorporated into the core and sheath layers, respectively. Furthermore, the resultant STDF demonstrates a wide-range temperature-sensing performance at 100–500 °C and an ultrasensitive alarm response time (within 2 s) when encountering fires. This work sheds new light on the design of bionic temperature sensing fibers with environment-adaptive self-healing and damage warning abilities for improved reliability and durability in real-world wearable application scenarios. |
| Keywords | Thermoelectric aerogel fiber; Damage detection and warning; Coaxial wet spinning; Self-healing; Multiple reversible bonds; Wearable temperature sensing |
| Contains Sensitive Content | Does not contain sensitive content |
| ANZSRC Field of Research 2020 | 340108. Sensor technology (incl. chemical aspects) |
| Byline Affiliations | Wuhan Textile University, China |
| School of Engineering | |
| Centre for Future Materials |
https://research.usq.edu.au/item/zyz7y/biological-skin-inspired-damage-warning-and-self-healing-thermoelectric-aerogel-fiber-via-coaxial-wet-spinning-for-wearable-temperature-sensing
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