Bacterial Cellulose (BC) functionalized with Ionic Liquids (ILs) is a promising candidate for sustainable electroactive sensors. While single-carrier transport models are well-established in piezoionic electroactive polymers, their applicability to BC-IL systems remains unverified. This study introduces a simplified 1D finite element model, significantly improving computational efficiency while preserving key physical insights. A detailed parametric analysis investigates the impact of different charge transport assumptions, revealing that single-carrier models are insufficient to fully describe the mechanoelectric transduction behavior. The results emphasize the necessity of a dual-carrier framework to accurately model BC-based transducers, offering a deeper understanding of multi-ionic interactions within the porous BC structure. By highlighting key mechanisms and limitations, this work provides a foundation for optimizing BC-IL sensors, preparing the way for more reliable and scalable bioelectronic applications.

Advancing Bacterial Cellulose-Based Sensors: A Simplified 1D White-Box Model and Parametric Study for Single Carrier Mechanoelectric Transduction

Sapuppo F.;Caponetto R.;Hosseini S. S.;Graziani S.;Pollicino A.;Xibilia M. G.
2025-01-01

Abstract

Bacterial Cellulose (BC) functionalized with Ionic Liquids (ILs) is a promising candidate for sustainable electroactive sensors. While single-carrier transport models are well-established in piezoionic electroactive polymers, their applicability to BC-IL systems remains unverified. This study introduces a simplified 1D finite element model, significantly improving computational efficiency while preserving key physical insights. A detailed parametric analysis investigates the impact of different charge transport assumptions, revealing that single-carrier models are insufficient to fully describe the mechanoelectric transduction behavior. The results emphasize the necessity of a dual-carrier framework to accurately model BC-based transducers, offering a deeper understanding of multi-ionic interactions within the porous BC structure. By highlighting key mechanisms and limitations, this work provides a foundation for optimizing BC-IL sensors, preparing the way for more reliable and scalable bioelectronic applications.
2025
Bacterial cellulose
Carrier transport model
Cellulose-based sensor
Mechanoelectric transduction
Single carrier
White-box models
Ionic liquids
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11769/707212
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