| Literature DB >> 31744264 |
Xiaodie Chen1,2, Bintian Li1,2, Yan Qiao1,2, Zhisong Lu1,2.
Abstract
The stretchable sensor has been considered as the most important component in a wearable device. However, it is still a great challenge to develop a highly sensitive textile-based strain sensor with good flexibility, excellent skin affinity, and large dynamic range. Herein, polypyrrole (PPy) was immobilized on a stretchable textile knitted by polyester and spandex via low-temperature interfacial polymerization to prepare a conductive strain sensor for human motion and respiration measurements. Scanning electron microscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectrometry, and thermal gravimetric data verify that a thin layer of PPy has been successfully coated on the textile with a high density and very uniform distribution. The resistance of the as-prepared textile is 21.25 Ω/cm2 and the PPy-coated textile could be used as an electric conductor to light up a LED lamp. Moreover, the textile could tolerate folding at an angle of 180° and 500 times of bending-twisting cycles without significant changes on its resistance. A negative correlation between the resistance change and the applied strain is observed for the textile-based sensor in the strain ranging from 0 to 71% with the gauge factor of -0.46. After more than 200 cycles of stretching-releasing under the strain of 26%, there is no obvious alteration on the sensing responses. The sensors were attached on volunteers' body or clothes for the real-time measurement of human motions and respiration, demonstrating that the textile-based sensor could sensitively detect finger, elbow, and knee bending and differentiate deep, normal, and fast breath. This work may provide an approach to uniform and dense coating conductive polymers on textiles for highly sensitive and stretchable sensors, which possess great potentials in practical applications for real-time monitoring human motions and physiological signs.Entities:
Keywords: human motion; low-temperature interfacial polymerization; strain sensor; textile; wearable electronics
Year: 2019 PMID: 31744264 PMCID: PMC6915628 DOI: 10.3390/mi10110788
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Micromachines (Basel) ISSN: 2072-666X Impact factor: 2.891
Figure 1Preparation of polypyrrole (PPy)-coated textile via low-temperature interfacial polymerization.
Figure 2SEM images of pristine polyester/spandex textile at low (a) and high magnifications (c); SEM images of PPy-coated polyester/spandex textile at low (b) and high magnifications (d); and inset in (c,d): Detailed surface morphologies of the fibers before and after PPy coating, respectively.
Figure 3(a) FTIR spectra of the polyester/spandex textiles before and after PPy modification. (b) thermal gravimetric analyzer (TGA) curves of the polyester/spandex textiles before and after PPy modification in an atmosphere of nitrogen.
Figure 4(a) The normalized resistance of PPy-coated polyester/spandex textile at the bending angle of 0–180°; effects of repeated bending (b) and twisting (c) on the normalized resistance of PPy-coated polyester/spandex textiles; and (d) demonstration of the conductivity of PPy-coated polyester/spandex textile.
Figure 5(a) PPy-coated polyester/spandex textiles stretched to different strain ratios along the weft and warp directions; (b) relative resistance change (ΔR/R0) as a function of tensile strain; and (c) current responses of a textile-based sensor upon periodic stretching-releasing cycles under a strain of 26%.
Summary of previously reported strain sensors based on PPy-coated textiles.
| Textile Types | Method | Resistance | Maximum Strain Range | Gauge Factor | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cotton spandex | In situ polymerization at 0 °C | 3.83 Ω/cm2 | 0–9% | −1.23 | [ |
| Polyester/Spandex | In situ polymerization at 0 °C | 6.77 Ω/cm2 | 0–8% | −0.05 | [ |
| Lycra | In situ polymerization at room temperature | 375 Ω/cm2 | 0–60% | −0.69 | [ |
| Cotton/Spandex | In situ polymerization at 0 °C | 8.93 Ω/cm2 | 0–25% | 0.71(15−25%) | [ |
| PU/PDMS | In situ polymerization at room temperature | 130.63 Ω/cm2 | 0.15 | [ | |
| Cotton | In situ polymerization at 0–8 °C | 303 Ω sq−1 | 0–35% | 0.35 (0–15%) | [ |
| Nylon/Lycra | Screen-printing/vapor | 0–20% | 8 | [ | |
| Polyester/Spandex | Low-temperature interfacial polymerization | 21.25 Ω/cm2 | 0–71% | −0.46 | This study |
Figure 6Microscopic images of a PPy-coated polyester/spandex textile at the releasing (a) and stretching (b) states. (c) schematic illustration of the structural change of the PPy-coated polyester/spandex textile under a stretching force. Arrows in (b) show the stretching direction.
Figure 7Responses of the textile-based strain sensors to human finger bending (a), elbow bending (b) and knee bending (c). Inserts are the photos showing the attachment of the devices on human body. (d) Real-time measurements of respiration by fixing a sensor on the volunteer’s abdomen. (e) Real-time measurements of finger bending by a glove-stitched sensor.