4.8 Article

Highly Stretchable Core-Sheath Fibers via Wet-Spinning for Wearable Strain Sensors

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 10, Issue 7, Pages 6624-6635

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.7b18677

Keywords

wet-spinning; carbon nanotubes; core-sheath fibers; wearable strain sensors; motion detection

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China-Shanxi Provincial Government Coal-Based Low Carbon Joint Fund [U1510114]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51575437]

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Lightweight, stretchable, and wearable strain sensors have recently been widely studied for the development of health monitoring systems, human machine interfaces, and wearable devices. Herein, highly stretchable polymer elastomer-wrapped carbon nanocomposite piezoresistive core sheath fibers are successfully prepared using a facile and scalable one-step coaxial wet-spinning assembly approach. The carbon nanotube polymeric composite core of the stretchable fiber is surrounded by an insulating sheath, similar to conventional cables, and shows excellent electrical conductivity with a low percolation threshold (0.74 vol %). The core sheath elastic fibers are used as wearable strain sensors, exhibiting ultra-high stretchability (above 300%), excellent stability (>10 000 cycles), fast response, low hysteresis, and good washability. Furthermore, the piezoresistive core sheath fiber possesses bending-insensitiveness and negligible torsion-sensitive properties, and the strain sensing performance of piezoresistive fibers maintains a high degree of stability under harsh conditions. On the basis of this high level of performance, the fiber-shaped strain sensor can accurately detect both subtle and large-scale human movements by embedding it in gloves and garments or by directly attaching it to the skin. The current results indicate that the proposed stretchable strain sensor has many potential applications in health monitoring, human machine interfaces, soft robotics, and wearable electronics.

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