1. Extraordinarily Sensitive and Low-Voltage Operational Cloth-Based Electronic Skin for Wearable Sensing and Multifunctional Integration Uses: A Tactile-Induced Insulating-to-Conducting Transition.
- Author
-
Lai, Ying‐Chih, Ye, Bo‐Wei, Lu, Chun‐Fu, Chen, Chien‐Tung, Jao, Meng‐Huan, Su, Wei‐Fang, Hung, Wen‐Yi, Lin, Tai‐Yuan, and Chen, Yang‐Fang
- Subjects
ARTIFICIAL skin ,BIOSENSOR research ,ROBOTICS equipment ,HUMAN-computer interaction ,DIGITAL electronics equipment - Abstract
Electronic skin sensing devices are an emerging technology and have substantial demand in vast practical fields including wearable sensing, robotics, and user-interactive interfaces. In order to imitate or even outperform the capabilities of natural skin, the keen exploration of materials, device structures, and new functions is desired. However, the very high resistance and the inadequate current switching and sensitivity of reported electronic skins hinder to further develop and explore the promising uses of the emerging sensing devices. Here, a novel resistive cloth-based skin-like sensor device is reported that possesses unprecedented features including ultrahigh current-switching behavior of ≈10
7 and giant high sensitivity of 1.04 × 104 -6.57 × 106 kPa−1 in a low-pressure region of <3 kPa. Notably, both superior features can be achieved by a very low working voltage of 0.1 V. Taking these remarkable traits, the device not only exhibits excellent sensing abilities to various mechanical forces, meeting various applications required for skin-like sensors, but also demonstrates a unique competence to facile integration with other functional devices for various purposes with ultrasensitive capabilities. Therefore, the new methodologies presented here enable to greatly enlarge and advance the development of versatile electronic skin applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF