Jeon Jisoo, Kim Jinyoung, Park Sehyun, Bryan Gwendolyn, Broderick Timothy J, Stone Morley, Tsukruk Vladimir V
School of Materials Science and Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia 30332, United States.
Institute for Human and Machine Cognition, Pensacola, Florida 32502, United States.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2024 Sep 11;16(36):48257-48268. doi: 10.1021/acsami.4c09327. Epub 2024 Sep 2.
Maintaining the adhesion strength of flexible pressure-sensitive adhesives (PSAs) is crucial for advanced applications, such as health monitoring. Sustainable mounting is critical for wearable sensor devices, especially under challenging surroundings such as low and high temperatures (e.g., polar regions or deserts), underwater and sweat environments (physical activity), and cyclical shear complex stresses. In this article, we consider the adhesive, mechanical, and optical properties of medical-grade double-sided PSAs by simulating extreme human-centric environments. Diverse temperature conditions, water and humidity exposures, and cyclical loads were selected and tested over long intervals, up to 28 days. We observed that high temperatures increased the shear adhesion strength due to the pore closing and expanding contact area between the adhesive layer and substrate. Conversely, low temperatures caused the adhesive layers to harden and reduce the adhesive strength. Immersion in salty and weakly acidic water and excessive humidity reduced adhesion as water interfered with the interfacial interactions. PSA films showed either adhesive or cohesive failure under extreme mechanical stresses and cyclical loading, which is also affected by the presence of various polar solvents. We demonstrated that the variable adhesive performance, mechanical properties, and optical transparency of pressure-sensitive materials can be directly related to changes in their morphologies, surface roughness, swelling state, and alternation of the mechanical contact area, helping to establish the broader rules of design for wearable human health monitoring sensors for the long-term application of wearable devices, sensors, and electrodes.
对于诸如健康监测等先进应用而言,保持柔性压敏胶粘剂(PSA)的粘附强度至关重要。可持续的粘贴对于可穿戴传感器设备至关重要,尤其是在具有挑战性的环境中,如低温和高温环境(例如极地地区或沙漠)、水下和汗液环境(身体活动)以及周期性剪切复合应力环境。在本文中,我们通过模拟以人类为中心的极端环境来研究医用级双面PSA的粘附、机械和光学性能。选择了多种温度条件、水和湿度暴露情况以及周期性载荷,并进行了长达28天的长时间测试。我们观察到,高温由于孔隙闭合以及胶粘剂层与基材之间接触面积的扩大而提高了剪切粘附强度。相反,低温导致胶粘剂层变硬并降低了粘附强度。浸入咸水和弱酸性水中以及过度潮湿会因水干扰界面相互作用而降低粘附力。在极端机械应力和周期性载荷下,PSA薄膜表现出粘附或内聚破坏,这也受到各种极性溶剂存在的影响。我们证明了压敏材料可变的粘附性能、机械性能和光学透明度可直接与其形态、表面粗糙度、溶胀状态以及机械接触面积的变化相关,这有助于为可穿戴设备、传感器和电极的长期应用建立用于可穿戴人体健康监测传感器的更广泛设计规则。