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Fingerprint-Inspired Strain Sensor with Balanced Sensitivity and Strain Range Using Laser-Induced Graphene
139
Citations
50
References
2021
Year
EngineeringElectronic SkinMechanical EngineeringVibration MeasurementWearable TechnologyMicroelectromechanical SystemsWearable SensorsBiomedical EngineeringFlexible SensorBiomedical DevicesMaterials ScienceWearable BiosensorsBalanced SensitivityWearable ElectronicsFingerprint-inspired Strain SensorOptical SensorsBiomedical SensorsFlexible SensorsMicrofabricationSensorsFlexible ElectronicsGrapheneSuperfast Response TimeSensor DesignStrain RangeWearable SensorExclusive Features
Sensitivity and strain range are two mutually exclusive features of strain sensors, where a significant improvement in flexibility is usually accompanied by a reduction in sensitivity. The skin of a human fingertip, due to its undulating fingerprint pattern, can easily detect environmental signals and enhances sensitivity without losing elasticity. Inspired by this characteristic, laser-induced graphene (LIG) with a fingerprint structure is prepared in one step on a polyimide (PI) film and transferred into an Ecoflex substrate to assemble resistive strain sensors. Experimentally, the fingerprint-inspired strain sensor exhibits a superfast response time (∼70 ms), balanced sensitivity and strain range (a gauge factor of 191.55 in the 42-50% strain range), and good reliability (>1500 cycles). Self-organized microcracks, initiated in weak mechanical areas, cause prominent resistance changes during reconnection/disconnection but irreversibly fail after excessive stretching. The robust function of fingerprint-inspired sensors is further demonstrated by real-time monitoring of tiny pulses, large body movements, gestures, and voice recognition.
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