Zijie Wang, Shuai Yang, Kun Zheng, Hezhe Zhang, Jiawei Zhai, Jinhui Song
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Wearable pressure sensors hold great application potential in electronic skin, personal health monitoring, motion detection, and artificial intelligence equipment, etc. As a wearable device, it requires not only good signal acquisition capabilities but also wearing comfort. Flexible and breathable are the two key desirable features for wearable sensors. However, presently, most of the wearable sensors made from impermeable polymers and metal electrodes lack breathability, although they can possess certain flexibility. Herein, we present a breathable and flexible pressure sensor, which is based on a multi-layer porous network structure, including a porous sensitive layer and mesh electrode layer. The porous skeleton decorated with functional nanomaterials enables the device not only flexibility but also great breathability. The fabricated pressure sensor shows a high sensitivity (2.1892 kPa−1), a wide response range (30 kPa), rapid response time/recovery time (82 ms /83 ms), and excellent cycling stability (1000 cycles). Additionally, the new sensor proposed here has been applied to monitor human movements, such as finger tapping, finger bending, neck swallowing, wrist bending, and elbow bending, indicating its potential for applications in health monitoring and rehabilitation training.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Electronics is an established refereed companion to the Journal of Materials Science. It publishes papers on materials and their applications in modern electronics, covering the ground between fundamental science, such as semiconductor physics, and work concerned specifically with applications. It explores the growth and preparation of new materials, as well as their processing, fabrication, bonding and encapsulation, together with the reliability, failure analysis, quality assurance and characterization related to the whole range of applications in electronics. The Journal presents papers in newly developing fields such as low dimensional structures and devices, optoelectronics including III-V compounds, glasses and linear/non-linear crystal materials and lasers, high Tc superconductors, conducting polymers, thick film materials and new contact technologies, as well as the established electronics device and circuit materials.