4.8 Article

Microtopography-Guided Conductive Patterns of Liquid-Driven Graphene Nanoplatelet Networks for Stretchable and Skin-Conformal Sensor Array

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 29, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.201606453

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Institute for Information and Communications Technology Promotion (IITP) - Korea government (MSIP) [B0132-15-1003]
  2. National Research Foundation of Korea [NRF-2014R1A1A1007162]
  3. Ministry of Trade, Industry & Energy (MOTIE, Korea) under Industrial Technology Innovation Program [10064081]
  4. Human Resources Development program of a Korea Institute of Energy Technology Evaluation and Planning (KETEP) - Korean government's Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy [20144030200580]
  5. National Creative Research Initiative (CRI) Center for Multi-Dimensional Directed Nanoscale Assembly [2015R1A3A2033061]
  6. Korea Evaluation Institute of Industrial Technology (KEIT) [10064081] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)
  7. National Research Foundation of Korea [2015R1A3A2033061, 2014R1A1A1007162] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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Flexible thin-film sensors have been developed for practical uses in invasive or noninvasive cost-effective healthcare devices, which requires high sensitivity, stretchability, biocompatibility, skin/organ-conformity, and often transparency. Graphene nanoplatelets can be spontaneously assembled into transparent and conductive ultrathin coatings on micropatterned surfaces or planar substrates via a convective Marangoni force in a highly controlled manner. Based on this versatile graphene assembled film preparation, a thin, stretchable and skin-conformal sensor array (144 pixels) is fabricated having microtopography-guided, graphene-based, conductive patterns embedded without any complicated processes. The electrically controlled sensor array for mapping spatial distributions (144 pixels) shows high sensitivity (maximum gauge factor approximate to 1697), skin-like stretchability (<48%), high cyclic stability or durability (over 105 cycles), and the signal amplification (approximate to 5.25 times) via structure-assisted intimate-contacts between the device and rough skin. Furthermore, given the thin-film programmable architecture and mechanical deformability of the sensor, a human skin-conformal sensor is demonstrated with a wireless transmitter for expeditious diagnosis of cardiovascular and cardiac illnesses, which is capable of monitoring various amplified pulse-waveforms and evolved into a mechanical/thermal-sensitive electric rubber-balloon and an electronic blood-vessel. The microtopography-guided and self-assembled conductive patterns offer highly promising methodology and tool for next-generation biomedical devices and various flexible/stretchable (wearable) devices.

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