23.2 Materials
CPs have tunable physicochemical and electrical properties and can be surface en
gineered by antibodies and other biological moieties according to the need of their ap
plication. Further, they can be altered through various cues such as electrical, pH,
thermal, electromechanical, etc. CPs are used as flexible strain sensors due to their ex
treme sensitivity in capacitance or resistance change [5]. One of the important factors for
deformable applications is the tensile modulus, where the CP can be tuned by composite
biomaterials to minimize the interfacial stresses such as between layers of the material or
between the device-tissue interactions. Among the CPs, this chapter focused on poly
(thiophene) (PTh), poly(aniline) (PANi), poly(pyrrole) (PPy), polyacetylene (PA), poly
(3,4-ethylene dioxythiophene) (PEDOT), and poly (vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF) that are a
few of the well-explored techniques. Figure 23.2 explains fundamental factors to fabricate
flexible bioelectronics and their structural design.
23.2.1 PTh
Due to its aromatic nature, thiophene, an organosulfur heterocyclic compound, offers the
scope of many substitution reactions. PTh finds enormous usage in organic electronic
devices due to its mechanical flexibility, low-cost synthesis, high electrical conductivity
(103 S/cm), environmental and thermal stability under both doped and dedoped states,
good optical property, and processability. The rigidity of PTh materials is ascribed to its
FIGURE 23.1
Illustrative image of the overall view.
Conducting Polymer-Based Biocomposites
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