A flexible and sensitive textile-based pressure sensor is developed using highly conductive fibers coated with dielectric rubber materials. The pressure sensor exhibits superior sensitivity, very fast response time, and high stability, compared with previous textile-based pressure sensors. By using a weaving method, the pressure sensor can be applied to make smart gloves and clothes that can control machines wirelessly as human-machine interfaces.
Stretchable conductive fibers have received significant attention due to their possibility of being utilized in wearable and foldable electronics. Here, highly stretchable conductive fiber composed of silver nanowires (AgNWs) and silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) embedded in a styrene–butadiene–styrene (SBS) elastomeric matrix is fabricated. An AgNW‐embedded SBS fiber is fabricated by a simple wet spinning method. Then, the AgNPs are formed on both the surface and inner region of the AgNW‐embedded fiber via repeated cycles of silver precursor absorption and reduction processes. The AgNW‐embedded conductive fiber exhibits superior initial electrical conductivity (σ0 = 2450 S cm−1) and elongation at break (900% strain) due to the high weight percentage of the conductive fillers and the use of a highly stretchable SBS elastomer matrix. During the stretching, the embedded AgNWs act as conducting bridges between AgNPs, resulting in the preservation of electrical conductivity under high strain (the rate of conductivity degradation, σ/σ0 = 4.4% at 100% strain). The AgNW‐embedded conductive fibers show the strain‐sensing behavior with a broad range of applied tensile strain. The AgNW reinforced highly stretchable conductive fibers can be embedded into a smart glove for detecting sign language by integrating five composite fibers in the glove, which can successfully perceive human motions.
A flexible pressure sensor with high performances is one of the promising candidates for achieving electronic skins (E‐skin) related to various applications such as wearable devices, health monitoring systems, and artificial robot arms. The sensitive response for external mechanical stimulation is fundamentally required to develop the E‐skin which imitates the function of human skin. The performance of capacitive pressure sensors can be improved using morphologies and structures occurring in nature. In this work, highly sensitive capacitive pressure sensors based on a porous structure of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) thin film, inspired on the natural multilayered porous structures seen in mushrooms, diatoms, and spongia offilinalis, have been developed and evaluated. A bioinspired porous dielectric layer is used, resulting in high‐performance pressure sensors with high sensitivity (0.63 kPa−1), high stability over 10 000 cycles, fast response and relaxation times, and extremely low‐pressure detection of 2.42 Pa. Additionally, the resulting pressure sensors are demonstrated to fabricate multipixel arrays, thus achieving successful real‐time tactile sensing of various touch shapes. The developed high‐performance flexible pressure sensors may open new opportunities for innovative applications in advanced human‐machine interface systems, robotic sensory systems, and various wearable health monitoring devices.
Highly efficient solar cells with sustainable performance under severe mechanical deformations are in great demand for future wearable power supply devices. In this regard, numerous studies have progressed to implement flexible architecture to high‐performance devices such as perovskite solar cells. However, the absence of suitable flexible and stretchable materials has been a great obstacle in the replacement of largely utilized transparent conducting oxides that are limited in flexibility. Here, a shape recoverable polymer, Noland Optical Adhesive 63, is utilized as a substrate of perovskite solar cell to enable complete shape recovery of the device upon sub‐millimeter bending radii. The employment of stretchable electrodes prevents mechanical damage of the perovskite layer. Before and after bending at a radius of 1 mm, power conversion efficiency (PCE) is measured to be 10.75% and 10.4%, respectively. Additionally, the shape recoverable device demonstrates a PCE of 6.07% after crumpling. The mechanical properties of all the layers are characterized by nanoindentation. Finite element analysis reveals that the outstanding flexibility of the perovskite layer enables small plastic strain distribution on the deformed device. These results clearly demonstrated that this device has great potential to be utilized in stretchable power supply applications.
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