TY - JOUR
T1 - Antifreezing Ultrathin Bioionic Gel-Based Wearable System for Artificial Intelligence-Assisted Arrhythmia Diagnosis in Hypothermia
AU - Wang, Bingfang
AU - Lv, Ailin
AU - Wu, Haofan
AU - Guo, Bihan
AU - Lu, Yuhan
AU - Chang, Zhiqiang
AU - Wu, Yuqing
AU - Li, Xiang
AU - Yang, Qiuyu
AU - Nie, Jianfang
AU - Wei, Jing
AU - Ren, Qinjuan
AU - Ji, Daizong
AU - Zhang, Ya
AU - Rotenberg, Menahem Y.
AU - Fang, Yin
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2025 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2025/3/4
Y1 - 2025/3/4
N2 - Cardiovascular disease (CAD) is a major global public health issue, with mortality rates being significantly impacted by cold temperatures. Stable and reliable electrocardiogram (ECG) monitoring in cold environments is crucial for early detection and treatment of CAD. However, existing skin sensor struggle to balance freeze resistance, breathability, flexibility, conductivity and adhesion at cold temperatures. Here, we introduce a solvent cross-linking strategy and an in situ transfer method to prepare ultrathin bioionic gels, featuring a freezing point below −80 °C and a thickness of only 12.6 μm. The strong and abundant interactions between the ionic liquid solvent and the zwitterionic polymer effectively suppress low-temperature crystallization, forming a toughened and highly adhesive network structure. This network enables the in situ formation of an ultrathin morphology, which can be seamlessly transferred onto various substrates. Furthermore, the solvent-cross-linked network maintains a large interpolymer chain spacing, facilitating rapid ion transport pathways. Even at subzero temperatures, the gel maintains its multifunctionality, demonstrating tissue-like softness (34.6 kPa), high ionic conductivity (10.06 mS cm-1), excellent stretchability (360%), high transparency, robust adhesive strength (175.3 kPa) and interfacial toughness (1146 J m-2). Integrated into a flexible wearable device, the ultrathin gel ensures excellent skin conformity, user comfort, and high signal-to-noise ECG signal acquisition. Leveraging an artificial neural network, the system analyzes bradycardia ECG signals and achieves 96.88% accuracy in arrhythmia detection under cold conditions. This bioionic gel-based system presents a promising solution for early CAD diagnosis and prediction in extreme environments.
AB - Cardiovascular disease (CAD) is a major global public health issue, with mortality rates being significantly impacted by cold temperatures. Stable and reliable electrocardiogram (ECG) monitoring in cold environments is crucial for early detection and treatment of CAD. However, existing skin sensor struggle to balance freeze resistance, breathability, flexibility, conductivity and adhesion at cold temperatures. Here, we introduce a solvent cross-linking strategy and an in situ transfer method to prepare ultrathin bioionic gels, featuring a freezing point below −80 °C and a thickness of only 12.6 μm. The strong and abundant interactions between the ionic liquid solvent and the zwitterionic polymer effectively suppress low-temperature crystallization, forming a toughened and highly adhesive network structure. This network enables the in situ formation of an ultrathin morphology, which can be seamlessly transferred onto various substrates. Furthermore, the solvent-cross-linked network maintains a large interpolymer chain spacing, facilitating rapid ion transport pathways. Even at subzero temperatures, the gel maintains its multifunctionality, demonstrating tissue-like softness (34.6 kPa), high ionic conductivity (10.06 mS cm-1), excellent stretchability (360%), high transparency, robust adhesive strength (175.3 kPa) and interfacial toughness (1146 J m-2). Integrated into a flexible wearable device, the ultrathin gel ensures excellent skin conformity, user comfort, and high signal-to-noise ECG signal acquisition. Leveraging an artificial neural network, the system analyzes bradycardia ECG signals and achieves 96.88% accuracy in arrhythmia detection under cold conditions. This bioionic gel-based system presents a promising solution for early CAD diagnosis and prediction in extreme environments.
KW - antifreezing and ultrathin
KW - artificial intelligence
KW - bioionic gel
KW - electrocardiogram monitoring
KW - wearable device
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=86000379453&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85217965966&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acsnano.4c17062
DO - 10.1021/acsnano.4c17062
M3 - مقالة
C2 - 39960656
SN - 1936-0851
VL - 19
SP - 8176
EP - 8188
JO - ACS Nano
JF - ACS Nano
IS - 8
ER -