4.8 Article

A High-Fidelity Skin-Attachable Acoustic Sensor for Realizing Auditory Electronic Skin

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 34, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202109545

Keywords

acoustic sensors; electronic skin; polymer processing; polymer sensors; wearable sensors

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Korea government (MSIT) [2021R1A4A1030944, 2021M3C1C3097512]
  2. IT R&D program of Ministry of Trade Industry and Energy (MOTIE)/Korea Evaluation Institute of Industrial Technology (KEIT) [10070055]
  3. Korea Evaluation Institute of Industrial Technology (KEIT) [10070055] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)
  4. National Research Foundation of Korea [2021M3C1C3097512] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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A skin-attachable acoustic sensor with high sensing accuracy and a wide auditory range is presented in this study. It maintains high sound-detection quality on flexible substrates and in a wide temperature range. The sensor shows significant potential for auditory electronic skin.
Wearable auditory sensors are critical in user-friendly sound-recognition systems for smart human-machine interaction and the Internet of Things. However, previously reported wearable sensors have limited sound-sensing quality as a consequence of a poor frequency response and a narrow acoustic-pressure range. Here, a skin-attachable acoustic sensor is presented that has higher sensing accuracy in wider auditory field than human ears, with flat frequency response (15-10 000 Hz) and a good range of linearity (29-134 dB(SPL)) as well as high conformality to flexible surfaces and human skin. This high sound-sensing quality is achieved by exploiting the low residual stress and high processability of polymer materials in a diaphragm structure designed using acousto-mechano-electric modeling. Thus, this acoustic sensor shows high acoustic fidelity by sensing human-audible sounds, even loud sounds and low-frequency sounds that human ears cannot detect without distorting them. The polymer-based ultrasmall (<9 mm(2)) and thin sensor maintains sound-detection quality on flexible substrates and in a wide temperature range (25 to 90 degrees C). The acoustic sensor shows a significant potential of auditory electronic skin, by recognizing voice successfully when the sensor attached on human skin is connected to a commercial mobile device running the latest artificial intelligence assistant.

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