Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://elar.urfu.ru/handle/10995/111185
Title: Mechanoelectrical Transduction in the Hydrogel-Based Biomimetic Sensors
Authors: Blyakhman, F. A.
Safronov, A. P.
Zubarev, A. Y.
Shklyar, T. F.
Dinislamova, O. A.
Lopez-Lopez, M. T.
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: Elsevier B.V.
Elsevier BV
Citation: Mechanoelectrical Transduction in the Hydrogel-Based Biomimetic Sensors / F. A. Blyakhman, A. P. Safronov, A. Y. Zubarev et al. // Sensors and Actuators, A: Physical. — 2016. — Vol. 248. — P. 54-61.
Abstract: The study addresses the phenomenon of mechanoelectrical transduction in polyelectrolyte hydrogels and, in particular, the search of the driving force for the change of the electrical potential of a gel under the applied mechanical stretch. Polyelectrolyte gels of calcium and magnesium salts of polymethacrylic acid were synthesized by the radical polymerization in water solution. Their electrical potential measured by microcapillary electrodes was negative and fall within 100–140 mV range depending on the nature of a counterion and the networking density of a gel. The rectangular samples (∼10 mm in length and 2 × 2 mm in cross-section) of gel-based sensors underwent the dynamic axial deformation, and the simultaneous monitoring of their geometrical dimensions and the electrical potential was performed. Sensor elongation resulted in the overall increase of gel volume, and it was always accompanied by the gel potential change toward the depolarization (diminishing of the negative values). Theoretical model based on the assumption of the total electrical charge conservation in the course of the dynamic deformation of a filament was proposed to describe the dependence of the electrical potential of a gel on its volume. Good agreement between the predictions of the model and the experimental trend was shown. The proposed mechanism of mechanoelectrical transduction based on the stretch-dependant volume changes in polyelectrolyte hydrogels might be useful to understand the nature of mechanical sensing in much more complex biological gels like the cell cytoskeleton. © 2016 Elsevier B.V.
Keywords: BIOMIMETIC SENSORS
DEPOLARIZATION
ELECTRICAL POTENTIAL
MECHANICAL DEFORMATION
MODELING
POLYELECTROLYTE HYDROGEL
BACTERIOPHAGES
BIOMIMETICS
DEFORMATION
DEPOLARIZATION
DYNAMICS
GELS
MODELS
POLYELECTROLYTES
SALTS
BIOMIMETIC SENSORS
ELECTRICAL POTENTIAL
GEOMETRICAL DIMENSIONS
MECHANICAL DEFORMATION
MECHANOELECTRICAL TRANSDUCTION
MICRO-CAPILLARY ELECTRODES
POLYELECTROLYTE HYDROGELS
SIMULTANEOUS MONITORING
HYDROGELS
URI: http://elar.urfu.ru/handle/10995/111185
Access: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
SCOPUS ID: 84979207762
WOS ID: 000383940500008
PURE ID: 1054141
ISSN: 0924-4247
DOI: 10.1016/j.sna.2016.06.020
metadata.dc.description.sponsorship: This work has been done under the financial support of the Russian Scientific Fund, project 14-19-00989. One of us (M.Т. Lopez-Lopez) has been supported by the Grant FIS2013-41821-R ( MINECO, Spain ).
RSCF project card: 14-19-00989
Appears in Collections:Научные публикации ученых УрФУ, проиндексированные в SCOPUS и WoS CC

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