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Cation-Induced Assembly of Conductive MXene Fibers for Wearable Heater, Wireless Communication, and Stem Cell Differentiation

  • Xuemei Fu
  • , Haitao Yang
  • , Zhipeng Li
  • , Nien Che Liu
  • , Pei Shan Lee
  • , Kerui Li
  • , Shuo Li
  • , Meng Ding
  • , John S. Ho
  • , Yi Chen Ethan Li
  • , I. Chi Lee
  • , Po Yen Chen
  • National University of Singapore
  • National Tsing Hua University
  • Feng Chia University
  • University of Maryland, College Park

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Scopus citations

Abstract

Emerging wearable electronics, wireless communication, and tissue engineering require the development of conductive fiber-shaped electrodes and biointerfaces. Ti3C2Tx MXene nanosheets serve as promising building block units for the construction of highly conductive fibers with integrated functionalities, yet a facile and scalable fabrication scheme is highly required. Herein, a cation-induced assembly process is developed for the scalable fabrication of conductive fibers with MXene sheaths and alginate cores (abbreviated as MXene@A). The fabrication scheme of MXene@A fibers includes the fast extrusion of alginate fibers followed by electrostatic assembly of MXene nanosheets, enabling high-speed fiber production. When multiple fabrication parameters are optimized, the MXene@A fibers exhibit a superior electrical conductivity of 1083 S cm-1, which can be integrated as Joule heaters into textiles for wearable thermal management. By triggering reversible de/hydration of alginate cores upon heating, the MXene@A fibers can be repeatedly contracted and generate large contraction stress that is >40 times higher than the ones of mammalian skeletal muscle. Furthermore, the MXene@A springs demonstrate large contraction strains up to 65.5% and are then fabricated into a reconfigurable dipole antenna to wirelessly monitor the surrounding heat sources. In the end, with the biocompatibility of MXene nanosheets, the MXene@A fibers enable the guidance of neural stem/progenitor cells differentiation and the promotion of neurite outgrowth. With a cation-induced assembly process, our multifunctional MXene@A fibers exhibit high scalability for future manufacturing and hold the prospect to inspire other applications.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2129-2139
Number of pages11
JournalACS Biomaterials Science and Engineering
Volume9
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - 8 May 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • conductive fiber
  • stem cell differentiation
  • TiCT MXene nanosheet
  • wearable Joule heater
  • wireless communication

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