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Autonomous Polymer Frameworks for Sustainable Tissue-Interfaced Plastic Bioelectronicsopen access

Authors
Boahen, Elvis K.Kong, ZhengyangKim, So YoungOh, HayoungYoo, HanseoLim, Jeong SubShin, Hyun JoonKim, Ji HongKim, Do Hwan
Issue Date
Jan-2026
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
autonomous polymer frameworks; plastic bioelectronics; sustainable electronics; tissue-interfaced applications
Citation
ADVANCED SCIENCE, v.13, no.4, pp 1 - 26
Pages
26
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
ADVANCED SCIENCE
Volume
13
Number
4
Start Page
1
End Page
26
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/211935
DOI
10.1002/advs.202515320
ISSN
2198-3844
2198-3844
Abstract
Recent advancements in polymer science have enabled the development of plastic bioelectronics, providing soft, stretchable, and tissue-conformable technologies for continuous health monitoring, diagnostics, and therapeutic interventions. Unlike conventional silicon-based electronics that often exhibit mechanical mismatches with biological tissues, plastic bioelectronic systems leverage intrinsically soft and mechanically compliant organic and polymer materials to achieve enhanced conformability. This reduces interfacial stress and enables high-fidelity signal acquisition from dynamic tissue interfaces. However, the low mechanical modulus that enables their unique advantages also makes these systems susceptible to mechanical damage, weak adhesion, and functional degradation under physiological conditions. To overcome these limitations, emerging research focuses on integrating autonomous polymer frameworks (auto-POFs)-engineered materials that endow the polymer matrix with self-adhesion, self-protection, self-healing, self-degradation, and self-sensing capabilities. These features enable real-time responsiveness to stimuli and extend device lifespan without external intervention. This review provides a comprehensive overview of recent progress in auto-POF-based systems, including their material design strategies, functional mechanisms, and roles in enhancing the reliability and adaptability of sustainable, wearable, and implantable tissue-interfaced plastic bioelectronics. By highlighting key material innovations and device architectures, the path is outlined toward next-generation biomedical platforms capable of autonomous and sustainable operation in dynamic biological environments.
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