Abstract
Printable aqueous carbon nanotube (CNT) inks are promising for scalable, flexible, and wearable electronics, yet it remains challenging to simultaneously achieve high electrical performance, long-term dispersion stability, and reliable processability in water. A one-pot ternary deep eutectic solvent (TDES) pretreatment enables lignin depolymerization and functionalization with ammonium phytate/sulfate groups, followed by spontaneous self-assembly into P/N/S-containing lignin nanoparticles (PLNPs). The resulting PLNPs exhibit tunable particle sizes (from 24 nm to 100 nm) and high negative surface charge (up to −62.6 mV). PLNPs adsorb uniformly onto CNT surfaces without forming large aggregates. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations reveal an “anchor-and-disperse” interfacial mechanism, in which PLNPs anchor on CNT surfaces with heteroatom-enabled noncovalent interactions, while surface charge and hydration provide electrosteric and steric stabilization that suppresses reaggregation. The PLNPs/CNT inks show pronounced shear-thinning and rapid thixotropic recovery, making them suitable for screen printing of conductive patterns on paper. The inks exhibit excellent colloidal stability (>100 days) and achieve conductivities up to 34.9 S·cm−1 without additional synthetic additives. Furthermore, cotton textiles can be dip-coated to fabricate wearable piezoresistive sensors capable of monitoring diverse human motions. This work provides a renewable, waterborne CNT ink platform for sustainable printed and wearable textile electronics.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 152558 |
| Journal | International Journal of Biological Macromolecules |
| Volume | 367 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Jun 2026 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- Carbon nanotubes
- Deep eutectic solvent
- High dispersion
- High electrical conductivity
- Lignin nanoparticles
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