학술논문

Biohybrid plants with electronic roots via in vivopolymerization of conjugated oligomersElectronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/d1mh01423d
Document Type
Article
Source
Materials Horizons; 2021, Vol. 8 Issue: 12 p3295-3305, 11p
Subject
Language
ISSN
20516347; 20516355
Abstract
Plant processes, ranging from photosynthesis through production of biomaterials to environmental sensing and adaptation, can be used in technology viaintegration of functional materials and devices. Previously, plants with integrated organic electronic devices and circuits distributed in their vascular tissue and organs have been demonstrated. To circumvent biological barriers, and thereby access the internal tissue, plant cuttings were used, which resulted in biohybrids with limited lifetime and use. Here, we report intact plants with electronic functionality that continue to grow and develop enabling plant-biohybrid systems that fully maintain their biological processes. The biocatalytic machinery of the plant cell wall was leveraged to seamlessly integrate conductors with mixed ionic–electronic conductivity along the root system of the plants. Cell wall peroxidases catalyzed ETE-S polymerization while the plant tissue served as the template, organizing the polymer in a favorable manner. The conductivity of the resulting p(ETE-S) roots reached the order of 10 S cm−1and remained stable over the course of 4 weeks while the roots continued to grow. The p(ETE-S) roots were used to build supercapacitors that outperform previous plant-biohybrid charge storage demonstrations. Plants were not affected by the electronic functionalization but adapted to this new hybrid state by developing a more complex root system. Biohybrid plants with electronic roots pave the way for autonomous systems with potential applications in energy, sensing and robotics.