Hydrogels and liquid
metals have been emerging as potential materials
for use in self-healing electronics. This paper presents a simple
fabrication procedure for a custom-designed hydrogel–liquid
metal composite and its various applications. The hydrogel is patterned
using three-dimensional printed molds for creating an electrical pathway,
which is subsequently filled with liquid metal. The lifetime and self-healing
property of the hydrogel improve drastically through coating of its
surface with a moisture protectant layer and via the formation of
an oxidized layer of liquid metal, respectively. Three joined units
of the resulting hydrogel–liquid metal composite are successfully
applied as self-healable electrodes in a customizable multimodular
sensor system consisting of a photoresistor, a thermistor, and a tilt
switch. The composite is also used as an electrode for biosignal (electromyogram,
electrocardiogram, and electrodermal activity) detection, and its
sensing ability is found to be comparable to that of a conventional
Ag/AgCl electrode. The demonstrated hydrogel–liquid metal composite
provides wide scope for researchers to achieve practical advances
in self-healing electronics