review articles in recent years. Readers are advised to go through these review articles for
in-depth details. Here in this chapter, we would limit ourselves to the inclusion of con
ductive hydrogel materials for bioelectronics.
Reasonable signal transduction traversing the biotic/abiotic interface is vital for current
bioelectronics design and operation. Conducting hydrogels are promising materials that
can remove the disparity between the biotic and abiotic phases. They can offer effective
and reliable signal transduction between bioelectronic devices and tissue. Electronic
devices are rigid and dry while biological tissues are soft and wet causing an increase in
interfacial impedance due to scar tissue formation. Furthermore reduction in stimula
tion/recording efficacy is observed due to an increase in tissue–electrode distance. Due to
the structural similarity of hydrogels with natural tissue, it can function as an excellent
interface between electrode-electrolyte as well as biological soft and synthetic hard
materials. Owing to ionic as well electronic conductivity of conducting hydrogel, they
find applications in neural electrodes, artificial skin, and electronic tongue as well as in
various implants. Furthermore, properties of conducting hydrogels such as toughness,
stretchability, and biocompatibility can be easily modulated and additional properties
required for bioelectronic applications such as self-healing and shape-memory may also
be incorporated. Additionally, their high water holding characteristic facilitates the
exchange of biological molecules and markers across interfaces. Earlier inorganic ma
terials such as metal electrodes and silicone were widely used for bioelectronic but
they differ intrinsically in terms of chemical and mechanical properties as compared to
body tissue. This critical difference causes serious problems such as nonconforming
contact between the devices and the skin or tissue, unstable signal collection, as well as
causing inflammatory responses in the body. Currently, most bioelectronic devices are
used in the form of electrodes that interact with biological systems and collect/deliver
various bioelectronic signals in different parts of the body such as skin, brain, spinal
cord, and heart.
18.2 Conducting Polymers
Conducting polymers (CPs) facilitate electronic pathways within the polymer backbone.
Examples of commercially used CPs are poly(p-phenylene), polyaniline (PANI), poly
pyrrole (PPy), polythiophene (PTh), poly(3,4-ethylene dioxythiophene) polystyrene sul
fonate (PEDOT: PSS), polyphenazine (PPz), polycarbazole (PCz), and their derivatives.
CPs show high stable electronic conductivity and thus have gained quite a popularity in
the field of bioelectronics. CPs have been widely applied in biosensors, bio-electrodes,
enzyme immobilization, and biomedical devices. Among others, PANI, PPy, and PEDOT
are the most commonly employed conducting polymers in bioelectronics applications
due to their high conductivity, biocompatibility, good water dispersibility, and high
stretchability. The PEDOT usually doped with polystyrene sulfonate (PSS) is most pop
ular because of its highly stable electrochemical conductivity combined with a narrow
bandgap making it a suitable candidate for several electroanalytical biosensing applica
tions as well as for the fabrication of platforms for tissue engineering applications.
Thiophene-based polymers have also gained popularity due to their stability and high
conductivity which can be varied with dopants. CPs have been integrated with biosensors
for the determination of several chemical species of biological importance including
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