Abstract
Among the existing two-dimensional materials, MXenes, i.e. transition metal carbides, nitrides and/or carbonitrides, stand out for their excellent electrochemical properties. Due to their high charge storage capacity, metal-like conductivity, biocompatibility as well as hydrophilicity, Ti3C2Tx MXene-based inks hold great potential for scalable production of skin conformable electronics via direct printing methods. Herein, we develop an aqueous MXene ink and inkjet-print MXene films on freestanding, flexible, and conducting polymer-based substrates. These skin-adherent MXene electrodes detect electrocardiography signals with high signal-to-noise ratio while exhibiting preserved electrical performance after 1000 cycles of bending with a 50 d long shelf life in ambient conditions. We show that printed MXene films can be further functionalized to perform as multifunctional biosensing units. When integrated with a sodium (Na+) ion selective membrane, MXene electrodes detect Na+ in artificial sweat with a sensitivity of 40 mV per decade. When the films are functionalized with antibodies, they generate an electrical signal in response to a pro-inflammatory cytokine protein (interferon gamma) with a sensitivity of 3.9 mV per decade. Our findings demonstrate how inkjet-printed MXene films simplify the fabrication of next-generation wearable electronic platforms that comprise multimodal sensors.
Recommended Citation
A. Saleh and S. Wustoni and E. Bihar and J. K. El-Demellawi and Y. Zhang and A. Hama and V. Druet and A. Yudhanto and G. Lubineau and H. N. Alshareef and S. Inal, "Inkjet-Printed Ti3C2TX Mxene Electrodes for Multimodal Cutaneous Biosensing," Jphys Materials, vol. 3, no. 4, article no. 044004, IOP Publishing, Oct 2020.
The definitive version is available at https://doi.org/10.1088/2515-7639/abb361
Department(s)
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Publication Status
Open Access
Keywords and Phrases
Electrocardiogram; Immunosensors; Inkjet printing; Ion sensors; MXene; Skin electronics
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
2515-7639
Document Type
Article - Journal
Document Version
Final Version
File Type
text
Language(s)
English
Rights
© 2025 The Authors, All rights reserved.
Creative Commons Licensing

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Publication Date
01 Oct 2020
