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Nonpatterned Soft Piezoresistive Films with Filamentous Conduction Paths for Mimicking Multiple-Resolution Receptors of Human Skin

Soft pressure sensors play key roles as input devices of electronic skin (E-skin) to imitate real human skin. For efficient data acquisition according to stimulus types such as detailed pressure images or macroscopic strength of stimuli, soft pressure sensors can have variable spatial resolution, ju...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:ACS applied materials & interfaces 2022-12, Vol.14 (49), p.55088-55097
Main Authors: Kim, Hanul, Choi, Seongdae, Lee, Byeongmoon, Seo, Jiseok, Lee, Seunghwan, Yoon, Jinsu, Hong, Yongtaek
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Soft pressure sensors play key roles as input devices of electronic skin (E-skin) to imitate real human skin. For efficient data acquisition according to stimulus types such as detailed pressure images or macroscopic strength of stimuli, soft pressure sensors can have variable spatial resolution, just like the uneven spatial distribution of pressure-sensing receptors on the human body. However, previous methods on soft pressure sensors cannot achieve such tunability of spatial resolution because their sensor materials and read-out electrodes need to be elaborately patterned for a specific sensor density. Here, we report a universal soft pressure-sensitive platform based on anisotropically self-assembled ferromagnetic particles embedded in elastomer matrices whose spatial resolution can be facilely tuned. Various spatial densities of pressure-sensing receptors of human body parts can be implemented by simply sandwiching the film between soft electrodes with different pitches. Since the anisotropically aligned nickel particles form independent filamentous conductive paths, the pressure sensors show spatial sensing ability without crosstalk, whose spatial resolution up to 100 dpi can be achieved from a single platform. The sensor array shows a wide dynamic range capable of detecting various pressure levels, such as liquid drops (∼30 Pa) and plantar (∼300 kPa) pressures. Our universal soft pressure-sensing platform would be a key enabling technology for actually imitating the receptor systems of human skin in robot and biomedical applications.
ISSN:1944-8244
1944-8252
DOI:10.1021/acsami.2c16929