4.8 Article

An All-Silk-Derived Dual-Mode E-skin for Simultaneous Temperature-Pressure Detection

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 9, Issue 45, Pages 39484-39492

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.7b13356

Keywords

silk nanofibers; combo temperature-pressure sensors; strain sensors; electronic skins; flexible electronics

Funding

  1. NSF of China [51672153, 51422204, 51372132]
  2. National Key Basic Research and Development Program [2016YFA0200103, 2013CB228506]

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Flexible skin-mimicking electronics are highly desired for development of smart human machine interfaces and wearable human-health monitors. Human skins are able to simultaneously detect different information, such as touch, friction, temperature, and humidity. However, due to the mutual interferences of sensors with different functions, it is still a big challenge to fabricate multifunctional electronic skins (E-skins). Herein, a combo temperature pressure E-skin is reported through assembling a temperature sensor and a strain sensor in both of which flexible and transparent silk-nanofiber-derived carbon fiber membranes (SilkCFM) are used as the active material. The temperature sensor presents high temperature sensitivity of 0.81% per centigrade. The strain sensor shows an extremely high sensitivity with a gauge factor of similar to 8350 at 50% strain, enabling the detection of subtle pressure stimuli that induce local strain. Importantly, the structure of the SilkCFM in each sensor is designed to be passive to other stimuli, enabling the integrated E-skin to precisely detect temperature and pressure at the same time. It is demonstrated that the E-skin can detect and distinguish exhaling, finger pressing, and spatial distribution of temperature and pressure, which cannot be realized using single mode sensors. The remarkable performance of the silk-based combo temperature pressure sensor, together with its green and large-scalable fabrication process, promising its applications in human machine interfaces and soft electronics.

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