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A self-sensing photoactuator based on temperature self-compensated MXene/graphite composite ink for objects recognition and biomimetic soft robotics

  • He Chen
  • , Liangliang Xu*
  • , Pengyang Li
  • , Zhong Chen
  • , Jinhua Xiong
  • , Zonglin Liu
  • , Qian Yan
  • , Haowen Zheng
  • , Xu Zhao
  • , Fuhua Xue
  • , Huanxin Lian
  • , Yunxiang Chen
  • , Teng Fei
  • , Ying Hu*
  • , Qingyu Peng*
  • , Xiaodong He
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Harbin Institute of Technology
  • Ltd.
  • Hefei University of Technology

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Soft actuators endowed with self-sensing capability become highly sought after in recent years. Ti3C2Tx MXene is expected to be used in the development of self-sensing actuators due to its outstanding physical and chemical properties. However, achieving precise deformation feedback of MXene-based actuators remains a challenge, as the resistance change of MXene is not only affected by deformation, but also by temperature, and the decoupling is difficult. Here, a composite ink with temperature self-compensation (0.00125 %·°C−1 of temperature coefficient of resistance) is fabricated by combining MXene and graphite with opposite temperature coefficients of resistance. The composite ink can be written on a variety of substrates, including glass, cellulose paper, and various polymers. Based on this, an ink-cellulose/polymer composite actuator with self-sensing function is actualized. The actuator can achieve accurate real-time deformation feedback by monitoring the resistance signal of ink-cellulose layer, which shows a high linear sensitivity (gauge factor ~ 14.5, coefficient of determination (R2) > 0.99), thereby realizing the perception of touch behavior and distinguishing objects with different weights, softness, and roughness. Besides, a series of biomimetic devices and soft robots with programmable movements (rolling and self-sustained oscillating) are also demonstrated. The results offer new insights for the development of the self-sensing actuators.

Original languageEnglish
Article number94907744
JournalNano Research
Volume18
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2025

Keywords

  • MXene
  • deformation feedback
  • self-sensing
  • soft actuator
  • temperature self-compensation

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