4.6 Article

Flexible Capacitive Pressure Sensor Based on Microstructured Composite Dielectric Layer for Broad Linear Range Pressure Sensing Applications

Journal

MICROMACHINES
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/mi13020223

Keywords

capacitive pressure sensor; microstructured dielectric composite layer; linearity; detection range

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51905404, 91748209]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [JB211304]
  3. Open Fund of the Key Laboratory of Flight Techniques and Flight Safety, CAAC [FZ2020KF01]

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This study presents a novel flexible capacitive pressure sensor with a microstructured composite dielectric layer (MCDL). The sensor showed high sensitivity and repeatability within a wide linear range, along with fast response time. The results demonstrate the potential application of the sensor in robotics and healthcare fields.
Flexible pressure sensors have attracted a considerable amount of attention in various fields including robotics and healthcare applications, among others. However, it remains significantly challenging to design and fabricate a flexible capacitive pressure sensor with a quite broad linearity detection range due to the nonlinear stress-strain relation of the hyperelastic polymer-based dielectric material. Along these lines, in this work, a novel flexible capacitive pressure sensor with microstructured composite dielectric layer (MCDL) is demonstrated. The MCDL was prepared by enforcing a solvent-free planetary mixing and replica molding method, while the performances of the flexible capacitive pressure sensor were characterized by performing various experimental tests. More specifically, the proposed capacitive pressure sensor with 4.0 wt % cone-type MCDL could perceive external pressure loads with a broad detection range of 0-1.3 MPa, which yielded a high sensitivity value of 3.97 x 10(-3) kPa(-1) in a relative wide linear range of 0-600 kPa. Moreover, the developed pressure sensor exhibited excellent repeatability during the application of 1000 consecutive cycles and a fast response time of 150 ms. Finally, the developed sensor was utilized for wearable monitoring and spatial pressure distribution sensing applications, which indicates the great perspectives of our approach for potential use in the robotics and healthcare fields.

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