4.8 Article

Wireless Ti3C2Tx MXene Strain Sensor with Ultrahigh Sensitivity and Designated Working Windows for Soft Exoskeletons

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 14, Issue 9, Pages 11860-11875

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c04730

Keywords

soft exoskeletons; strain sensors; wireless technologies; hierarchical morphologies; titanium carbide Ti3C2Tx MXene

Funding

  1. Faculty Research Committee (FRC) Start-Up Grant of the National University of Singapore [R-279-000-515-133]
  2. Ministry of Education (MOE) Academic Research Fund (AcRF) [R-279-000-532-114, R-279-000-551-114, R-279000-579-112]
  3. AME Young Investigator Research Grant (A*STAR) [R279-000-546-305, A1884c0017]
  4. Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology (SMART) ignition grant [R-279-000-572-592]
  5. National Research Foundation Singapore [NRFF2017-07, AISG-GC-2019-002]

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Emerging soft exoskeletons pose urgent needs for high-performance strain sensors with tunable linear working windows to achieve a high-precision control loop. Still, the stateof-the-art strain sensors require further advances to simultaneously satisfy multiple sensing parameters, including high sensitivity, reliable linearity, and tunable strain ranges. Besides, a wireless sensing system is highly desired to enable facile monitoring of soft exoskeleton in real time, but is rarely investigated. Herein, wireless Ti3C2Tx MXene strain sensing systems were fabricated by developing hierarchical morphologies on piezoresistive layers and incorporating regulatory resistors into circuit designs as well as integrating the sensing circuit with near-field communication (NFC) technology. The wireless MXene sensor system can simultaneously achieve an ultrahigh sensitivity (gauge factor >= 14,000) and reliable linearity (R-2 approximate to 0.99) within multiple user-designated high-strain working windows (130% to >= 900%). Additionally, the wireless sensing system can collectively monitor the multisegment exoskeleton actuations through a single database channel, largely reducing the data processing loading. We finally integrate the wireless, battery-free MXene e-skin with various soft exoskeletons to monitor the complex actuations that assist hand/leg rehabilitation.

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