4.7 Article

Thermotropic Liquid Crystals for Temperature Mapping

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2022.806362

Keywords

temperature sensing; infrared thermography; colorimetric sensor; temperature distribution; thermotropic liquid crystals

Funding

  1. WHISKIES
  2. ESA
  3. Alice and David Van Buuren Fund
  4. Foundation Jaumotte-Demoulin

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Wound management in Space is an important factor to be considered in future Human Space Exploration. This study explores the development of reliable wound monitoring systems using liquid crystal films and compares them against non-local infrared measurements. The results demonstrate that the proposed liquid crystal sensing element can be suitable for future wound monitoring systems.
Wound management in Space is an important factor to be considered in future Human Space Exploration. It demands the development of reliable wound monitoring systems that will facilitate the assessment and proper care of wounds in isolated environments, such as Space. One possible system could be developed using liquid crystal films, which have been a promising solution for real-time in-situ temperature monitoring in healthcare, but they are not yet implemented in clinical practice. To progress in the latter, the goal of this study is twofold. First, it provides a full characterization of a sensing element composed of thermotropic liquid crystals arrays embedded between two elastomer layers, and second, it discusses how such a system compares against non-local infrared measurements. The sensing element evaluated here has an operating temperature range of 34-38 degrees C, and a quick response time of approximately 0.25 s. The temperature distribution of surfaces obtained using this system was compared to the one obtained using the infrared thermography, a technique commonly used to measure temperature distributions at the wound site. This comparison was done on a mimicked wound, and results indicate that the proposed sensing element can reproduce the temperature distributions, similar to the ones obtained using infrared imaging. Although there is a long way to go before implementing the liquid crystal sensing element into clinical practice, the results of this work demonstrate that such sensors can be suitable for future wound monitoring systems.

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