Flexible and wearable electronics integrated with various sensors have great potential for applications in monitoring human activities and personal health. Bending and tension/compression dominate the deformation modes yielded by flexure of joints and diverse body gestures. A key challenge now is to sense the curvature/bending angle, while much research has been focused on the strain sensors for tension/compression. Alternative approaches by strain sensors or noncontact optical methods for curvature sensing are not practical for wearable electronics. A novel adhesion‐free thin‐film‐like curvature sensor that can monitor bending activities is introduced for flexible and wearable electronics. This study presents comprehensive design, fabrication, mechanism, structural analysis, performance characterization, and device‐level demonstrations for bending of joints, gesture recognition, and real‐time sitting posture correction. The most prominent advantage of the present sensor is that the measurement is independent of the strain of the target surface and the interfacial slippage, thus the perfect adhesion between the sensor and the surface is unnecessary. The features of adhesion‐free, simple mechanical principle, low cost, and satisfactory monitoring results highlight the superiority of the present curvature sensors for practical applications to flexible and wearable electronics.
Figure 1: Left: diverse and visually plausible 3D shapes generated by SDF-StyleGAN. Right: the applications enabled by SDF-StyleGAN. (a) Shape completion from partial point cloud inputs. (b) Shape generation from single-view images. (c) Chair arms and car roofs are generated via shape style editing.
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