2 research outputs found
Mesoporous Solid and Yolk–Shell Titania Microspheres as Touchless Colorimetric Sensors with High Responsivity and Ultrashort Response Times
Touchless user interfaces offer an
attractive pathway toward hygienic,
remote, and interactive control over devices. Exploiting the humidity
generated from fingers or human speech is a viable avenue for realizing
such technology. Herein, titania microspheres including solid and
yolk–shell structures with varying microstructural characteristics
were demonstrated as high-performance, ultrafast, and stable optical
humidity sensors aimed for touchless control. When water molecules
enter the microporous network of the microspheres, the effective refractive
index of the microsphere increases, causing a detectable change in
the light scattering behavior. The microstructural properties of the
microspheres, namely, the pore characteristics, crystallinity, and
particle size, were examined in relation to the humidity-sensing performance,
establishing optimum structural conditions for realizing humidity-responsive
wavelength shifts above 100 nm, near full-scale relative humidity
(RH) responsivity, ultrashort response times below 30 ms, and prolonged
lifetimes. These optimized microspheres were used to demonstrate a
colorimetric touchless sensor that responds to humidity from a finger
and a microcontroller-based detector that translates the moisture
pattern from human speech to electrical signals in real time. These
results provide practical strategies for enabling humidity-based touchless
user interfaces
Mesoporous Solid and Yolk–Shell Titania Microspheres as Touchless Colorimetric Sensors with High Responsivity and Ultrashort Response Times
Touchless user interfaces offer an
attractive pathway toward hygienic,
remote, and interactive control over devices. Exploiting the humidity
generated from fingers or human speech is a viable avenue for realizing
such technology. Herein, titania microspheres including solid and
yolk–shell structures with varying microstructural characteristics
were demonstrated as high-performance, ultrafast, and stable optical
humidity sensors aimed for touchless control. When water molecules
enter the microporous network of the microspheres, the effective refractive
index of the microsphere increases, causing a detectable change in
the light scattering behavior. The microstructural properties of the
microspheres, namely, the pore characteristics, crystallinity, and
particle size, were examined in relation to the humidity-sensing performance,
establishing optimum structural conditions for realizing humidity-responsive
wavelength shifts above 100 nm, near full-scale relative humidity
(RH) responsivity, ultrashort response times below 30 ms, and prolonged
lifetimes. These optimized microspheres were used to demonstrate a
colorimetric touchless sensor that responds to humidity from a finger
and a microcontroller-based detector that translates the moisture
pattern from human speech to electrical signals in real time. These
results provide practical strategies for enabling humidity-based touchless
user interfaces
