| Literature DB >> 32390318 |
Ning Tang1,2, Cheng Zhou3, Danyao Qu4, Ye Fang3, Youbin Zheng2, Wenwen Hu1, Ke Jin1, Weiwei Wu4, Xuexin Duan3, Hossam Haick2,4.
Abstract
Achieving highly accurate responses to external stimuli during human motion is a considerable challenge for wearable devices. The present study leverages the intrinsically high surface-to-volume ratio as well as the mechanical robustness of nanostructures for obtaining highly-sensitive detection of motion. To do so, highly-aligned nanowires covering a large area were prepared by capillarity-based mechanism. The nanowires exhibit a strain sensor with excellent gauge factor (≈35.8), capable of high responses to various subtle external stimuli (≤200 µm deformation). The wearable strain sensor exhibits also a rapid response rate (≈230 ms), mechanical stability (1000 cycles) and reproducibility, low hysteresis (<8.1%), and low power consumption (<35 µW). Moreover, it achieves a gauge factor almost five times that of microwire-based sensors. The nanowire-based strain sensor can be used to monitor and discriminate subtle movements of fingers, wrist, and throat swallowing accurately, enabling such movements to be integrated further into a miniaturized analyzer to create a wearable motion monitoring system for mobile healthcare.Entities:
Keywords: healthcare; motion monitoring; nanowires; strain sensors; wearable electronics
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32390318 DOI: 10.1002/smll.202001363
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281