4.8 Article

Chip-less wireless electronic skins by remote epitaxial freestanding compound semiconductors

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 377, Issue 6608, Pages 859-869

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.abn7325

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [T32-GM008326, R01-GM099813, R35-GM138206]
  2. NASA [80NSSC18M0093]
  3. Searle Scholars Program
  4. NIH Common Fund Transformative High-Resolution Cryoelectron Microscopy program [U24 GM129541]

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Recent advances in flexible and stretchable electronics have led to the development of electronic skin (e-skin)based health monitoring platforms. Conventional wireless e-skins use rigid integrated circuit chips, while chip-less wireless e-skins use surface acoustic wave sensors made of piezoelectric materials, which offer highly sensitive, low-power, and long-term sensing capabilities for monitoring strain, ultraviolet light, and ion concentrations in sweat. These findings provide new routes for creating inexpensive and versatile wireless health monitoring devices.
Recent advances in flexible and stretchable electronics have led to a surge of electronic skin (e-skin)based health monitoring platforms. Conventional wireless e-skins rely on rigid integrated circuit chips that compromise the overall flexibility and consume considerable power. Chip-less wireless e-skins based on inductor-capacitor resonators are limited to mechanical sensors with low sensitivities. We report a chipless wireless e-skin based on surface acoustic wave sensors made of freestanding ultrathin single-crystalline piezoelectric gallium nitride membranes. Surface acoustic wave-based e-skin offers highly sensitive, low-power, and long-term sensing of strain, ultraviolet light, and ion concentrations in sweat. We demonstrate weeklong monitoring of pulse. These results present routes to inexpensive and versatile low-power, high-sensitivity platforms for wireless health monitoring devices.

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