Biodegradable Polycarbonate Iongels for Electrophysiology Measurements.
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Authors
Y Yuen, Alexander
H Aguirresarobe, Robert
Del Agua, Isabel
Ismailov, Usein
G Malliaras, George
Sardon, Haritz
Publication Date
2018-09-05Journal Title
Polymers (Basel)
ISSN
2073-4360
Publisher
MDPI AG
Volume
10
Issue
9
Language
eng
Type
Article
Physical Medium
Electronic
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Y Yuen, A., Porcarelli, L., H Aguirresarobe, R., Sanchez-Sanchez, A., Del Agua, I., Ismailov, U., G Malliaras, G., et al. (2018). Biodegradable Polycarbonate Iongels for Electrophysiology Measurements.. Polymers (Basel), 10 (9) https://doi.org/10.3390/polym10090989
Abstract
In recent years, gels based on ionic liquids incorporated into polymer matrices, namely iongels, have emerged as long-term contact media for cutaneous electrophysiology. Iongels possess high ionic conductivity and negligible vapor pressure and can be designed on demand. In spite of the extensive efforts devoted to the preparation of biodegradable ionic liquids, the investigations related to the preparation of iongels based on biodegradable polymers remain scarce. In this work, biodegradable polycarbonate-based iongels are prepared by ring-opening polymerization of N-substituted eight ring membered cyclic carbonate monomers in the presence of imidazolium lactate ionic liquid. Our iongels are able to take up 10⁻30 wt % of ionic liquid and become softer materials by increasing the amount of free ionic liquid. Rheological measurements showed that the cross-over point between the storage modulus G' and loss modulus G″ occurs at lower angular frequencies when the loading of free ionic liquid increases. These gels are able to take up to 30 wt % of the ionic liquid and the ionic conductivity of these gels increased up to 5 × 10-4 S·cm-1 at 25 °C as the amount of free ionic liquid increased. Additionally, we assess the biodegradation studies of the iongels by immersing them in water. The iongels decrease the impedance with the human skin to levels that are similar to commercial Ag/AgCl electrodes, allowing an accurate physiologic signals recording. The low toxicity and biodegradability of polycarbonate-based iongels make these materials highly attractive for cutaneous electrophysiology applications.
Keywords
biodegradable, electrodes, electrophysiology, iongels, polycarbonate
Sponsorship
European Commission Horizon 2020 (H2020) Marie Sk?odowska-Curie actions (742865)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/polym10090989
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/285115
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