4.8 Article

Flexible Polydimethylsiloxane Foams Decorated with Multiwalled Carbon Nanotubes Enable Unprecedented Detection of Ultralow Strain and Pressure Coupled with a Large Working Range

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 10, Issue 16, Pages 13877-13885

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.8b02322

Keywords

porous PDMS foams; carbon nanotubes; piezoresistivity; strain sensors; pressure sensors; flexible sensors; ultralow strain/pressure detection; large working range

Funding

  1. EU ETN SYNCHRONICS [643238]

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Low-cost piezoresistive strain/pressure sensors with large working range, at the same time able to reliably detect ultralow strain (<= 0.1%) and pressure (<= 1 Pa), are one of the challenges that have still to be overcome for flexible piezoresistive materials toward personalized health-monitoring applications. In this work, we report on unprecedented, simultaneous detection of ultrasmall strain (0.1%, i.e., 10 mu m displacement over 10 mm) and subtle pressure (20 Pa, i.e., a force of only 2 mN over an area of 1 cm(2)) in compression mode, coupled with a large working range (i.e., up to 60% for strain-6 mm in displacement-and 50 kPa for pressure) using piezoresistive, flexible three-dimensional (3D) macroporous polydimethylsiloxane (pPDMS) foams decorated with pristine multiwalled carbon nanotubes (CNTs). pPDMS/CNT foams with pore size up to 500 mu m (i.e., twice the size of those of commonly used foams, at least) and porosity of 77%, decorated with a nanostructured surface network of CNTs at densities ranging from 7.5 to 37 mg/cm(3) are prepared using a low-cost and scalable process, through replica molding of sacrificial sugar templates and subsequent drop-casting of CNT ink. A thorough characterization shows that piezoresistive properties of the foams can be finely tuned by controlling the CNT density and reach an optimum at a CNT density of 25 mg/cm(3), for which a maximum change of the material resistivity (e.g., rho(0)/rho(50) = 4 at 50% strain) is achieved under compression. Further static and dynamic characterization of the pPDMS/CNT foams with 25 mg/cm(3) of CNTs highlights that detection limits for strain and pressure are 0.03% (3 mu m displacement over 10 mm) and 6 Pa (0.6 mN over an area of 1 cm(2)), respectively; moreover, good stability and limited hysteresis are apparent by cycling the foams with 255 compression-release cycles over the strain range of 0-60%, at different strain rates up to 10 mm/min. Our results on piezoresistive, flexible pPDMS/CNT foams pave the way toward breakthrough applications for personalized health care, though not limited to these, which have not been fully addressed to date with flexible strain/stress sensors.

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