Abstract
Conductive hydrogels (CHs) have attracted significant attention in the fields of flexible electronics, human-machine interaction, and electronic skin (e-skin) due to their self-adhesiveness, environmental stability, and multi-stimuli responsiveness. However, integrating these diverse functionalities into a single conductive hydrogel system remains a challenge. In this study, polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) and polyacrylamide (PAM) were used as the dual-network matrix, lithium chloride and MXene were added, and a simple immersion strategy was adopted to synthesize a multifunctional MXene-based conductive hydrogel in a glycerol/water (1:1) binary solvent system. A subsequent investigation was then conducted on the hydrogel. The prepared PVA/PAM/LiCl/MXene hydrogel exhibits excellent tensile properties (~1700%), high electrical conductivity (1.6 S/m), and good self-healing ability. Furthermore, it possesses multimodal sensing performance, including humidity sensitivity (sensitivity of -1.09/% RH), temperature responsiveness (heating sensitivity of 2.2 and cooling sensitivity of 1.5), and fast pressure response/recovery times (220 ms/230 ms). In addition, the hydrogel has successfully achieved real-time monitoring of human joint movements (elbow and knee bending) and physiological signals (pulse, breathing), as well as enabled monitoring of spatial pressure distribution via a 3 × 3 sensor array. The performance and versatility of this hydrogel make it a promising candidate for next-generation flexible sensors, which can be applied in the fields of human health monitoring, electronic skin, and human-machine interaction.