3 research outputs found
Wearable, Flexible, and Multifunctional Healthcare Device with an ISFET Chemical Sensor for Simultaneous Sweat pH and Skin Temperature Monitoring
Real-time
daily healthcare monitoring may increase the chances
of predicting and diagnosing diseases in their early stages which,
currently, occurs most frequently during medical check-ups. Next-generation
noninvasive healthcare devices, such as flexible multifunctional sensor
sheets designed to be worn on skin, are considered to be highly suitable
candidates for continuous real-time health monitoring. For healthcare
applications, acquiring data on the chemical state of the body, alongside
physical characteristics such as body temperature and activity, are
extremely important for predicting and identifying potential health
conditions. To record these data, in this study, we developed a wearable,
flexible sweat chemical sensor sheet for pH measurement, consisting
of an ion-sensitive field-effect transistor (ISFET) integrated with
a flexible temperature sensor: we intend to use this device as the
foundation of a fully integrated, wearable healthcare patch in the
future. After characterizing the performance, mechanical flexibility,
and stability of the sensor, real-time measurements of sweat pH and
skin temperature are successfully conducted through skin contact.
This flexible integrated device has the potential to be developed
into a chemical sensor for sweat for applications in healthcare and
sports
Air Ambient-Operated pNIPAM-Based Flexible Actuators Stimulated by Human Body Temperature and Sunlight
Harnessing
a natural power source such as the human body temperature or sunlight
should realize ultimate low-power devices. In particular, macroscale
and flexible actuators that do not require an artificial power source
have tremendous potential. Here we propose and demonstrate electrically
powerless polymer-based actuators operated at ambient conditions using
a packaging technique in which the stimulating power source is produced
by heat from the human body or sunlight. The actuating angle, force,
and reliability are discussed as functions of temperature and exposure
to sunlight. Furthermore, a wearable device platform and a smart curtain
actuated by the temperature of human skin and sunlight, respectively,
are demonstrated as the first proof-of-concepts. These nature-powered
actuators should realize a new class of ultimate low-power devices
Fully Printed Flexible Fingerprint-like Three-Axis Tactile and Slip Force and Temperature Sensors for Artificial Skin
A three-axis tactile force sensor that determines the touch and slip/friction force may advance artificial skin and robotic applications by fully imitating human skin. The ability to detect slip/friction and tactile forces simultaneously allows unknown objects to be held in robotic applications. However, the functionalities of flexible devices have been limited to a tactile force in one direction due to difficulties fabricating devices on flexible substrates. Here we demonstrate a fully printed fingerprint-like three-axis tactile force and temperature sensor for artificial skin applications. To achieve economic macroscale devices, these sensors are fabricated and integrated using only printing methods. Strain engineering enables the strain distribution to be detected upon applying a slip/friction force. By reading the strain difference at four integrated force sensors for a pixel, both the tactile and slip/friction forces can be analyzed simultaneously. As a proof of concept, the high sensitivity and selectivity for both force and temperature are demonstrated using a 3 × 3 array artificial skin that senses tactile, slip/friction, and temperature. Multifunctional sensing components for a flexible device are important advances for both practical applications and basic research in flexible electronics