1 research outputs found
Paper/Carbon Nanotube-Based Wearable Pressure Sensor for Physiological Signal Acquisition and Soft Robotic Skin
A wearable and flexible
pressure sensor is essential to the realization of personalized medicine
through continuously monitoring an individual’s state of health
and also the development of a highly intelligent robot. A flexible,
wearable pressure sensor is fabricated based on novel single-wall
carbon nanotube /tissue paper through a low-cost and scalable approach.
The flexible, wearable sensor showed superior performance with concurrence
of several merits, including high sensitivity for a broad pressure
range and an ultralow energy consumption level of 10<sup>–6</sup> W. Benefited from the excellent performance and the ultraconformal
contact of the sensor with an uneven surface, vital human physiological
signals (such as radial arterial pulse and muscle activity at various
positions) can be monitored in real time and in situ. In addition,
the pressure sensors could also be integrated onto robots as the artificial
skin that could sense the force/pressure and also the distribution
of force/pressure on the artificial skin