Publication | Closed Access
Epidermal Electronic Systems for Measuring the Thermal Properties of Human Skin at Depths of up to Several Millimeters
71
Citations
26
References
2018
Year
Epidermal Electronic SystemsEngineeringElectronic SkinBlood Flow PropertiesWearable TechnologyThermal TherapyBiomedical EngineeringDermatologyMedical InstrumentationHydration StatusThermal AnalysisThermodynamicsBiophysicsCutaneous BiologySkin SubstituteHeat TransferBiomedical SensorsThermographyBioelectronicsTemperature MeasurementHuman SkinThermal SensorMedicineThermal EngineeringDermal StructureThermal Properties
Abstract Monitoring the composition, blood flow properties, and hydration status of human skin can be important in diagnosing disease and tracking overall health. Current methods are largely limited to clinical environments, and they primarily measure properties of superficial layers of the skin, such as the stratum corneum (10–40 µm). This work introduces soft, skin‐like thermal depth sensors (e‐TDS) in designs that seamlessly couple with human skin and measure its thermal properties with depth sensitivity that can extend up to 6 mm beneath the surface. Guidelines for tailoring devices to enable measurements through different effective depths follow from a systematic set of experiments, supported by theoretical modeling. On‐body testing validates the physiological relevance of measurements using the e‐TDS platform, with potential to aid the diagnosis of deep cutaneous and systemic diseases. Specific demonstrations include measurements that capture responses ranging from superficial changes in skin properties that result from application of a moisturizer, to changes in microvascular flow at intermediate depths induced by heating/cooling, to detection of inflammation in the deep dermis and subcutaneous fat in an incidence of a local bacterial infection, cellulitis.
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