We report a fabrication method for flexible and printable thermal sensors based on composites of semicrystalline acrylate polymers and graphite with a high sensitivity of 20 mK and a high-speed response time of less than 100 ms. These devices exhibit large resistance changes near body temperature under physiological conditions with high repeatability (1,800 times). Device performance is largely unaffected by bending to radii below 700 μm, which allows for conformal application to the surface of living tissue. The sensing temperature can be tuned between 25°C and 50°C, which covers all relevant physiological temperatures. Furthermore, we demonstrate flexible active-matrix thermal sensors which can resolve spatial temperature gradients over a large area. With this flexible ultrasensitive temperature sensor we succeeded in the in vivo measurement of cyclic temperatures changes of 0.1°C in a rat lung during breathing, without interference from constant tissue motion. This result conclusively shows that the lung of a warm-blooded animal maintains surprising temperature stability despite the large difference between core temperature and inhaled air temperature. T emperature control plays a very important role in homeostasis, and body temperature varies both spatially and temporally in an effort to transfer heat between the living body and the environment via skin and respiratory organs. Accurate measurement of localized temperature changes in soft tissue regardless of large-scale motion is important in understanding thermal phenomena of homeostasis and realizing future sophisticated health diagnostics (1-3). Therefore, flexible temperature sensors which softly interface with tissue have been investigated frequently for applications in the medical field. However, these applications require the combination of sensitivity, fast response time, stability in physiological environments, and multipoint measurement. Before this work, to our knowledge, no experiment has simultaneously demonstrated orders-of-magnitude changes in electrical properties (sensitivity) repeatedly at varying physiological temperatures and conditions (stability) in a robust, easy-to-fabricate, flexible temperature sensor (processability).When sensors and electronics are directly attached to the surface of an animal body, the use of soft and flexible electronic devices is expected to reduce mechanical stress induced on the body. From this viewpoint, the field of flexible electronics has attracted much attention recently. The ability to gather information such as pressure and temperature from curvilinear and dynamic surfaces without impairing the movement or usability of the users is unmatched by conventional silicon electronics. There have been reports of the potential application of flexible electrodes on ultrathin substrates (4), flexible sensors that measure biological signals, electrocardiograms, temperature, pressure (5, 6), organic amplifier systems (7), high-sensitivity pressure sensors (8), and ultrathin and imperceptible devices (9, 10).To meas...
The fluidic channel in the flexible probe has three functions: (i) to inject chemicals into the tissues, (ii) to measure the neural activities from the tissues, and (iii) to improve the mechanical stiffness of the probe by filling the channel with a solid material. A 10-microm-thick microfluidic channel was embedded into the probe by using sacrificial photoresist patterns. Polyethylene glycol (PEG), which is solid at room temperature and dissolves when in contact with water, was used to fill the channel and increase the stiffness of the probe before insertion into the tissue. The impedance of the electrode inside the fluidic channel was around 100 kOmega at 1 kHz when the channel was filled with saline solution. We were able to insert the probe into a rat's brain and measure the neural signals with the electrode.
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