# A bioinspired microdevice unifying energy storage and actuation through hydration control

**Authors:** Wenlan Zhang, Leandro Merces, Jiachen Ma, Christian Becker, Daniil Karnaushenko, Hongmei Tang, Jiang Qu, Letícia Mariê Minatogau Ferro, Yang Huang, Yaping Yan, Yeji Lee, Vineeth K. Bandari, Dmitriy D. Karnaushenko, Aleksandr I. Egunov, Minshen Zhu, Oliver G. Schmidt

PMC · DOI: 10.1038/s41467-026-70831-3 · Nature Communications · 2026-03-19

## TL;DR

Researchers developed a microdevice that combines energy storage and movement by controlling hydration in a polymer, mimicking biological systems.

## Contribution

The study introduces hydration control as a design parameter to unify energy storage and actuation in compact devices.

## Key findings

- Reducing anion hydration suppresses water ingress and mitigates polymer degradation.
- A sub-millimeter microdevice integrates energy storage and actuation with a 0.56 mm² footprint.
- The device reduces actuator energy consumption by fourfold while delivering 161 mAh cm⁻².

## Abstract

Biological systems seamlessly integrate energy storage and actuation within compact architectures, whereas synthetic approaches largely implement these functions as separate components. Conjugated polymers can couple both, yet their operation relies on ion insertion accompanied by hydration water within the polymer backbone, creating an intrinsic trade-off between performance and stability. Here we show that anion hydration governs this trade-off. In-operando Raman spectroscopy and time-resolved mass measurements reveal that reducing anion hydration suppresses water ingress, mitigates backbone degradation and converts the polymer response from a two-step swelling process into a single, rapid volumetric relaxation. Leveraging this principle, we realize a sub-millimetre monolithic device that integrates energy storage and actuation within a 0.56 mm2 footprint. A centrally configured dual-cell microbattery delivers 161 mAh cm-2 and reduces the energy consumption of surrounding actuators by fourfold. Hydration control, as the governing design parameter for multifunctional devices, holds translational promise for integrated energy–motion architectures at the microscale.

Conjugated polymers are promising for compact energy storage and actuation devices though it is challenging to balance these properties. Here the authors report a polymer system suppressing ion hydration for a multifunctional microdevice.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** OH (MESH:C031356), imine (MESH:D007097), silicon (MESH:D012825), PAA (MESH:C513053), KCl (MESH:D011189), acetone (MESH:D000096), DBMP (MESH:C057465), C (MESH:D002244), DMAc (MESH:C074411), O (MESH:D010100), pyrrole (MESH:D011758), ethanol (MESH:D000431), Aesar (-), polymer (MESH:D011108), p-benzoquinone (MESH:C004532), diethylene glycol monoethyl ether (MESH:C010111), hydrogen (MESH:D006859), hydroquinone (MESH:C031927), PANI (MESH:C416807), methyl diethanolamine (MESH:C008430), LaCl3 (MESH:C028521), aniline (MESH:C023650), nitrogen (MESH:D009584), H2SO4 (MESH:C033158), PPy (MESH:C067635), Au (MESH:D006046), Cu (MESH:D003300), NaOH (MESH:D012972), isopropanol (MESH:D019840), Ag (MESH:D012834), H2O (MESH:D014867), 2-dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate (MESH:C510335), ZnSO4 (MESH:D019287), DADPS (MESH:D003622), Zn (MESH:D015032), lithium (MESH:D008094), N,N-dimethylacetamide (MESH:C013959), Metal (MESH:D008670), Acrylic acid (MESH:C036658), Ti (MESH:D014025), sodium dodecylbenzene sulfonate (MESH:C001114), 3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene (MESH:C000601652), Pt (MESH:D010984), HCl (MESH:D006851), AgCl (MESH:C037548)

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13004996/full.md

## References

3 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13004996/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13004996