| Literature DB >> 31885133 |
Hongsen Niu1, Song Gao1, Wenjing Yue1, Yang Li1, Weijia Zhou2, Hong Liu2,3.
Abstract
The tactile sensor lies at the heart of electronic skin and is of great importance in the development of flexible electronic devices. To date, it still remains a critical challenge to develop a large-scale capacitive tactile sensor with high sensitivity and controllable morphology in an economical way. Inspired by the interlocked microridges between the epidermis and dermis, herein, a highly sensitive capacitive tactile sensor by creating interlocked asymmetric-nanocones in poly(vinylidenefluoride-co-trifluoroethylene) film is proposed. Particularly, a facile method based on cone-shaped nanoporous anodized aluminum oxide templates is proposed to cost-effectively fabricate the highly ordered nanocones in a controllable manner and on a large scale. Finite-element analysis reveals that under vertical forces, the strain/stress can be highly strengthened and localized at the contact apexes, resulting in an amplified variation of film permittivity and thickness. Benefiting from this, the developed tactile sensor presents several conspicuous features, including the maximum sensitivity (6.583 kPa-1 ) in the low pressure region (0-100 Pa), ultralow detection limit (≈3 Pa), rapid response/recovery time (48/36 ms), excellent stability and reproducibility (10 000 cycles). These salient merits enable the sensor to be successfully applied in a variety of applications including sign language gesture detection, spatial pressure mapping, Braille recognition, and physiological signal monitoring.Entities:
Keywords: P(VDF-TrFE); anodized aluminum oxide; capacitive tactile sensors; electronic skin; highly morphology-controllable; interlocked asymmetric-nanocone arrays
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31885133 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201904774
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281