18 research outputs found

    Soft tubular microfluidics for 2D and 3D applications

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    Microfluidics has been the key component for many applications, including biomedical devices, chemical processors, microactuators, and even wearable devices. This technology relies on soft lithography fabrication which requires cleanroom facilities. Although popular, this method is expensive and labor-intensive. Furthermore, current conventional microfluidic chips precludes reconfiguration, making reiterations in design very time-consuming and costly. To address these intrinsic drawbacks of microfabrication, we present an alternative solution for the rapid prototyping of microfluidic elements such as microtubes, valves, and pumps. In addition, we demonstrate how microtubes with channels of various lengths and cross-sections can be attached modularly into 2D and 3D microfluidic systems for functional applications. We introduce a facile method of fabricating elastomeric microtubes as the basic building blocks for microfluidic devices. These microtubes are transparent, biocompatible, highly deformable, and customizable to various sizes and cross-sectional geometries. By configuring the microtubes into deterministic geometry, we enable rapid, low-cost formation of microfluidic assemblies without compromising their precision and functionality. We demonstrate configurable 2D and 3D microfluidic systems for applications in different domains. These include microparticle sorting, microdroplet generation, biocatalytic micromotor, triboelectric sensor, and even wearable sensing. Our approach, termed soft tubular microfluidics, provides a simple, cheaper, and faster solution for users lacking proficiency and access to cleanroom facilities to design and rapidly construct microfluidic devices for their various applications and needs. Keywords: flexible microfluidics, elastomeric microtubes, microfluidic assemblies, inertial focusing chip, microfluidic sensorSingapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology (SMART

    WEARABLE MICROFLUIDICS FOR TACTILE SENSING

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (NGS

    ADVANCES IN TECHNOLOGIES FOR PURIFICATION AND ENRICHMENT OF EXTRACELLULAR VESICLES.

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    10.1177/2472630319846877SLAS Technol2472630319846877

    HaptGlove—Untethered Pneumatic Glove for Multimode Haptic Feedback in Reality–Virtuality Continuum

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    Abstract Novel haptics technologies are urgently needed to bridge the gap between entirely physical world and fully digital environment to render a more realistic and immersive human–computer interaction. Current virtual reality (VR) haptic gloves either deliver limited haptic feedback or are bulky and heavy. The authors develop a haptic glove or HaptGlove, an untethered and lightweight pneumatic glove, that allows users to “physically” interact in a VR environment and enables both kinesthetic and cutaneous sensations naturally and realistically. Integrated with five pairs of haptic feedback modules and fiber sensors, HaptGlove provides variable stiffness force feedback and fingertip force and vibration feedback, allowing users to touch, press, grasp, squeeze, and pull various virtual objects and feel the dynamic haptic changes. Significant improvements in VR realism and immersion are observed in a user study with participants achieving 78.9% accuracy in sorting six virtual balls of different stiffnesses. Importantly, HaptGlove facilitates VR training, education, entertainment, and socialization in a reality–virtuality continuum

    Highly Stretchable, Weavable, and Washable Piezoresistive Microfiber Sensors

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    A key challenge in electronic textiles is to develop an intrinsically conductive thread of sufficient robustness and sensitivity. Here, we demonstrate an elastomeric functionalized microfiber sensor suitable for smart textile and wearable electronics. Unlike conventional conductive threads, our microfiber is highly flexible and stretchable up to 120% strain and possesses excellent piezoresistive characteristics. The microfiber is functionalized by enclosing a conductive liquid metallic alloy within the elastomeric microtube. This embodiment allows shape reconfigurability and robustness, while maintaining an excellent electrical conductivity of 3.27 ± 0.08 MS/m. By producing microfibers the size of cotton threads (160 μm in diameter), a plurality of stretchable tubular elastic piezoresistive microfibers may be woven seamlessly into a fabric to determine the force location and directionality. As a proof of concept, the conductive microfibers woven into a fabric glove were used to obtain physiological measurements from the wrist, elbow pit, and less accessible body parts, such as the neck and foot instep. Importantly, the elastomeric layer protects the sensing element from degradation. Experiments showed that our microfibers suffered minimal electrical drift even after repeated stretching and machine washing. These advantages highlight the unique propositions of our wearable electronics for flexible display, electronic textile, soft robotics, and consumer healthcare applications

    Highly Stretchable, Weavable, and Washable Piezoresistive Microfiber Sensors

    No full text
    A key challenge in electronic textiles is to develop an intrinsically conductive thread of sufficient robustness and sensitivity. Here, we demonstrate an elastomeric functionalized microfiber sensor suitable for smart textile and wearable electronics. Unlike conventional conductive threads, our microfiber is highly flexible and stretchable up to 120% strain and possesses excellent piezoresistive characteristics. The microfiber is functionalized by enclosing a conductive liquid metallic alloy within the elastomeric microtube. This embodiment allows shape reconfigurability and robustness, while maintaining an excellent electrical conductivity of 3.27 ± 0.08 MS/m. By producing microfibers the size of cotton threads (160 μm in diameter), a plurality of stretchable tubular elastic piezoresistive microfibers may be woven seamlessly into a fabric to determine the force location and directionality. As a proof of concept, the conductive microfibers woven into a fabric glove were used to obtain physiological measurements from the wrist, elbow pit, and less accessible body parts, such as the neck and foot instep. Importantly, the elastomeric layer protects the sensing element from degradation. Experiments showed that our microfibers suffered minimal electrical drift even after repeated stretching and machine washing. These advantages highlight the unique propositions of our wearable electronics for flexible display, electronic textile, soft robotics, and consumer healthcare applications

    Highly Stretchable, Weavable, and Washable Piezoresistive Microfiber Sensors

    No full text
    A key challenge in electronic textiles is to develop an intrinsically conductive thread of sufficient robustness and sensitivity. Here, we demonstrate an elastomeric functionalized microfiber sensor suitable for smart textile and wearable electronics. Unlike conventional conductive threads, our microfiber is highly flexible and stretchable up to 120% strain and possesses excellent piezoresistive characteristics. The microfiber is functionalized by enclosing a conductive liquid metallic alloy within the elastomeric microtube. This embodiment allows shape reconfigurability and robustness, while maintaining an excellent electrical conductivity of 3.27 ± 0.08 MS/m. By producing microfibers the size of cotton threads (160 μm in diameter), a plurality of stretchable tubular elastic piezoresistive microfibers may be woven seamlessly into a fabric to determine the force location and directionality. As a proof of concept, the conductive microfibers woven into a fabric glove were used to obtain physiological measurements from the wrist, elbow pit, and less accessible body parts, such as the neck and foot instep. Importantly, the elastomeric layer protects the sensing element from degradation. Experiments showed that our microfibers suffered minimal electrical drift even after repeated stretching and machine washing. These advantages highlight the unique propositions of our wearable electronics for flexible display, electronic textile, soft robotics, and consumer healthcare applications

    Highly Stretchable, Weavable, and Washable Piezoresistive Microfiber Sensors

    No full text
    A key challenge in electronic textiles is to develop an intrinsically conductive thread of sufficient robustness and sensitivity. Here, we demonstrate an elastomeric functionalized microfiber sensor suitable for smart textile and wearable electronics. Unlike conventional conductive threads, our microfiber is highly flexible and stretchable up to 120% strain and possesses excellent piezoresistive characteristics. The microfiber is functionalized by enclosing a conductive liquid metallic alloy within the elastomeric microtube. This embodiment allows shape reconfigurability and robustness, while maintaining an excellent electrical conductivity of 3.27 ± 0.08 MS/m. By producing microfibers the size of cotton threads (160 μm in diameter), a plurality of stretchable tubular elastic piezoresistive microfibers may be woven seamlessly into a fabric to determine the force location and directionality. As a proof of concept, the conductive microfibers woven into a fabric glove were used to obtain physiological measurements from the wrist, elbow pit, and less accessible body parts, such as the neck and foot instep. Importantly, the elastomeric layer protects the sensing element from degradation. Experiments showed that our microfibers suffered minimal electrical drift even after repeated stretching and machine washing. These advantages highlight the unique propositions of our wearable electronics for flexible display, electronic textile, soft robotics, and consumer healthcare applications
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