| Literature DB >> 32051489 |
Yi-Fei Wang1, Tomohito Sekine2, Yasunori Takeda2, Koji Yokosawa2, Hiroyuki Matsui2, Daisuke Kumaki2, Takeo Shiba2, Takao Nishikawa2, Shizuo Tokito3.
Abstract
Facile fabrication and high ambient stability are strongly desired for the practical application of temperautre sensor in real-time wearable healthcare. Herein, a fully printed flexible temperature sensor based on cross-linked poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS) was developed. By introducing the crosslinker of (3-glycidyloxypropyl)trimethoxysilane (GOPS) and the fluorinated polymer passivation (CYTOP), significant enhancements in humidity stability and temperature sensitivity of PEDOT:PSS based film were achieved. The prepared sensor exhibited excellent stability in environmental humidity ranged from 30% RH to 80% RH, and high sensitivity of -0.77% °C-1 for temperature sensing between 25 °C and 50 °C. Moreover, a wireless temperature sensing platform was obtained by integrating the printed sensor to a printed flexible hybrid circuit, which performed a stable real-time healthcare monitoring.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32051489 PMCID: PMC7016104 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-59432-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Schematic diagram of the printed temperature sensor structure. (b) Chemical structure of materials for PEDOT:PSS based sensing layer. (c) Fabrication process of printed temperature sensor. (d) Photography of printed temperature sensor attached on skin.
Figure 2(a) Temperature-dependent relative resistance changes of bare PEDOT:PSS film without passivation layer, under different humidity conditions of 30% RH and 60% RH. (b) Temperature-dependent relative resistance changes of bare PEDOT:PSS film with CYTOP passivation layer, under different humidity conditions of 30% RH and 60% RH. (c) Humidity-dependent relative resistance changes of PEDOT:PSS films with different concentrations of GOPS (G-0, G-1, G-3, G-5, G-7, G-9, and G-11). (d) Humidity-dependent relative resistance changes of CYTOP encapsulated PEDOT:PSS films with different concentrations of GOPS (G-0, G-9). (e) Temperature-dependent relative resistance changes of CYTOP encapsulated PEDOT:PSS films with different concentrations of GOPS (G-0, G-1, G-3, G-5, G-7, and G-9). (f) Conductivity of PEDOT:PSS film with different concentrations of GOPS. Inks with GOPS to PEDOT:PSS weight ratio of 0, 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 were denoted as G-0, G-1, G-3, G-5, G-7, G-9, G-11, respectively.
Figure 3(a) Temperature-dependent relative resistance changes of the printed temperature sensor (ink G-9) under different humidity conditions of 30% RH, 60% RH and 80% RH, the data were obtained based on 1 cycle of heating and cooling run. (b) Relative-resistance changes of temperature sensor based on continuous measurement for 70 min at temperature of 25 °C and 50 °C, under humidity changes from 30% RH to 80% RH. (c) relative resistance changes of printed temperature sensor under cyclic heating and cooling run between 30 °C and 45 °C. (d) Temperature-dependent relative resistance changes of 10 printed temperature sensors. (e) Relative resistance changes of printed temperature sensor concerning on bending radius (from 10 to 2 mm). (f) Temperature-dependent relative resistance changes of printed temperature sensor before bending (0 cycle) and after cyclic bending for 10000 cycles at a bending radius of 5 mm (10000 cycles).
Figure 4(a) Time-dependent resistance response of a printed temperature sensor to human skin. (b) Breathing rate and breathing type monitoring. (c) Enlarged image of date in red box region of (b). (d) Optical image of the wireless temperature sensing platform with printed temperature sensor. (e) Schematic diagram of wireless sensing platform mounted on an arm for real-time body temperature monitoring. (f) Schematic diagram of wireless sensing platform on a coffee cup for real-time object temperature monitoring. (g) Real-time temperature monitoring of skin by the platform under different environmental humidity. (h) Real-time temperature monitoring of a coffee cup after adding hot water.
Summary of some wearable temperature sensors and their performances.
| Sensitive Materiala | Sensitivity [% °C−1] | Response time (Recovery time) | Humidity Stability | Completed Circuit | Method | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crosslinked PEDOT:PSS | −0.77 | 1.5 s (6 s) | Yes | Yes | Printing | This work |
| AgNW | −0.33 | Not given | Not given | No | Spray-coating | [ |
| Gr/PEDOT:PSS | −0.06 | 20 s (18 s) | Not given | No | Printing | [ |
| PEDOT:PSS/CNT | −0.61 | 18 s | Not given | No | Printing | [ |
| pNIPAM /PEODT:PSS/CNT | −2.6 | 167 s (605 s) | No | No | Spin-coating | [ |
| rGO | −0.63 | 7 s (25 s) | Not given | No | Wet-spinning | [ |
| PEDOT:PSS | −0.25 | No given | Yes | No | Printing | [ |
aGr is the abbreviation for graphene, pNIPAM is the abbreviation for poly(N-isopropylacrylamide).