| Literature DB >> 32796604 |
Ahmed Al-Qatatsheh1, Yosry Morsi1, Ali Zavabeti2, Ali Zolfagharian3, Nisa Salim1, Abbas Z Kouzani3, Bobak Mosadegh4, Saleh Gharaie3.
Abstract
Advancements in materials science and fabrication techniques have contributed to the significant growing attention to a wide variety of sensors for digital healthcare. While the progress in this area is tremendously impressive, few wearable sensors with the capability of real-time blood pressure monitoring are approved for clinical use. One of the key obstacles in the further development of wearable sensors for medical applications is the lack of comprehensive technical evaluation of sensor materials against the expected clinical performance. Here, we present an extensive review and critical analysis of various materials applied in the design and fabrication of wearable sensors. In our unique tclass="Gene">ransdisciplinary approach, we studied the fundamentals of blood pressure and ex<class="Chemical">span class="Chemical">amined its measuring modalities while focusing on their clinical use and sensing principles to identify material functionalities. Then, we carefully reviewed various categories of functional materials utilized in sensor building blocks allowing for comparative analysis of the performance of a wide range of materials throughout the sensor operational-life cycle. Not only this provides essential data to enhance the materials' properties and optimize their performance, but also, it highlights new perspectives and provides suggestions to develop the next generation pressure sensors for clinical use.Entities:
Keywords: sensing materials; sensor operational lifecycle; smart health monitor devices; wearable sensors
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32796604 PMCID: PMC7474433 DOI: 10.3390/s20164484
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1The transdisciplinary approach for the comprehensive review of the recent development in biomaterials used for an accurate yet continuous blood pressure measurement.
Figure 2Schematic diagrams: (a) cardiac cycle, (b) arterial blood pressure versus ventricular and atrial blood pressure values, (c) morphological shapes of different signals associated with blood pressure.
Figure 3Schematic diagrams (a–e) illustrate the impact of artery stiffness and location on a blood pressure wave traveling through different arteries in an upright position. (e) shows blood pressure measurements in (mmHg) at three different locations (i.e., levels) in a person who is 182 cm tall: top of the head, heart, and foot.
Figure 4Blood pressure measurement landscape; approaches, methods, processing, and transducing layers. 1 PWA: At least a single pulsatility sensor or a single cardiovascular sensor is implemented; 2 PWV: At least two pulsatility sensors and/or additional cardiovascular sensor is implemented.
Summary of current blood pressure measurement techniques and assessment of their potential for accurate yet continuous wearable blood pressure measurement devices.
| SN | Approach | Technique | Method | Clinical Compliance | All-Day Activity 1 | Remarks/Usability | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Periodicity 2 | Accuracy 3 | Wearable | Wireless | |||||
| 1.0 | Invasive | Single/Multisensory | Arterial Catheter | Continuous 4 [ | Gold Standard [ | N/A 5 | N/A |
Free of Operator Bias. Requires Experts/Clinics or Hospitals. |
| 2.0 | Minimally Invasive | Subcutaneous Blood Pressure | Subcutaneous implantable PPG | Beat by Beat 6 [ | Controversial [ | N/A | N/A |
Free of Operator Bias. Requires Experts/Clinics or Hospitals. |
| 3.0 | Non-invasive | Full Occlusion | Auscultatory | Intermittent 7 [ | Gold Standard [ | Can Be 8 | Can Be | • Operator Bias and White Coat Effect [ |
| Oscillometry | Intermittent [ | Good [ | Can Be | Can Be | • Affected by Artery Stiffness and Age [ | |||
| Palpatory | Intermittent [ | Poor 9 [ | Can Be | Can Be | • Operator Bias (i.e., Radial Pulse) [ | |||
| Semi Occlusion | Applanation Tonometry | Continuous [ | Poor 10 [ | Can Be | Can Be |
Depends on Artery Location. [ | ||
| Volume Clamp | Continuous [ | Controversial [ | Yes | Can Be | • Complex Calibration may Lead to Overestimation of Blood Pressure [ | |||
| Blood Flow | Beat by Beat [ | Controversial [ | Yes | Yes | • Use of Contact Ultrasound Sensor [ | |||
| Non-Occlusion | Pulse Wave | Beat by Beat [ | Controversial [ | Yes 11 | Yes | • Lack of changes in physiological factors [e.g., Blood Viscosity] [ | ||
| Stroke Volume | Beat by Beat 12 [ | Controversial [ | Yes | Yes | • Complex Calibration Due to Physiological Artefacts [ | |||
| Blood Flow 13 | Beat by Beat [ | Controversial [ | Yes | Yes | • Needs to be further developed [ | |||
1 All Day Activity: Provides minimum capabilities for seamless 24/7 monitoring; 2 Periodicity: Provides information about blood pressure waveform; 3 Accuracy: Indicates the accuracy of blood pressure values when compared against an arterial catheter method; 4 Continuous: Provides a continuous blood pressure waveform; 5 N/A: Not Applicable; 6 Beat by Beat: Provides a single blood pressure value per heartbeat; 7 Intermittent: Provides an intermittent measurement of blood pressure waveform; 8 Can Be: it is not practical as it causes irritable contact; 9 Palpatory: Except for Systolic Pressure, it is difficult to measure diastolic pressure; 10 Applanation Tonometry: Except for eye tonometer, it is generally considered poor; 11 Yes: wearable, but this may affect accuracy due to motion/measurement artefacts; 12 Beat by Beat: this will depend on the method (e.g., O2 consumption); 13 Blood Flow: this includes arterial and venous blood pressure.
Figure 5Transducing modalities used in blood pressure measurement.
List of transducing modalities with some of their associated sensing principles.
| SN | Transducer Category | Transducing Modality | Sensing Principles | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Potential | Capacitive | Piezoelectricity | Piezoresistivity | |||
| 1.0 | Acoustic | PCG | - | * | Piezoelectric Accelerometer | - |
| Ultrasound | - | LZT Sensor | - | |||
| 2.0 | Electrical | ECG | Lead Electrode | CCEs | - | - |
| ICG | Lead Electrode | - | - | - | ||
| 3.0 | Electromagnetic | EM | - | PRF S-R Sensor | - | - |
| 4.0 | Mechanical | BCG | - | Electromechanical Film Sensor | - | - |
| SCG | - | - | MEMS Accelerometer & Gyroscope | |||
| TAG | - | Au/PEN | - | Flexible Piezoresistance | ||
| 5.0 | Optical | PPG | - | - | - | DPP-DTT: PCBM |
* Piezoelectric crystals appear electrically as capacitors (since they basically consist of two electrodes surrounding a dielectric material). However, at their resonant frequency they behave closer to a pure resistance.
Figure 6Fundamental sensing principles used in sensors.
Figure 7Essential performance elements necessary for accurate and continuous blood pressure measurement when compared to a gold standard.
List of biomaterials used as a substrate in wearable sensors.
| SN | Category | Substrate Material | Chemical Structure | Properties | Reference | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0 | Synthesis | PDMS | [C2H6OSi]n |
High stretchability. Non-toxic, non-flammable, and hydrophobic. Acceptable Processability:
Soft lithography through plant leaf or piece of silk or micromachined silicon wafer. Various fabricated patterns such as Groove, Pyramids, Hemispheres (e.g., Bumpy Design), Rods, and random-distributed channels with different sizes. | [ | • Lack of biodegradability. |
| Ecoflex® Silicone Elastomer | - |
High stretchability. Skin-safe silicone with lower modulus. | [ | • Lack of biodegradability. | ||
| PET | [C10H8O4]n |
Acceptable transparency (i.e., >85.0%). High creep resistance and excellent printability. | [ | • Relatively high modulus of elasticity (about 2~4 GPa). | ||
| PI | C35H28N2O7 |
Acceptable flexibility. Acceptable creep resistance and tensile strength. | [ | • Lack of biodegradability. | ||
| 2.0 | Natural | Cellulose Paper | [C6H10O5]n |
Inherently flexible. Porous, inexpensive, and recyclable. Biodegradable and biocompatibility. | [ | • Durability and stability are still amongst the biggest challenges for enhancing its properties. |
| Smart Textile * | - | • Flexible, inexpensive, and biocompatible. | [ |
Low-level integration. Can be further developed by: Increasing conductivity/ sensitivity Making conductive materials absorbed into porous fibers and textiles. They include Cotton-Ag dipped and repeatedly dried in Ag NWs solutions for a high-performance pressure sensor. |
* This includes silk and cotton where sensing chips are integrated into these textiles to realize a clothing-like sensing system.
Figure 8Substrate design and fabrication. (a) Bumpy design with PDMS substrate. Reproduced with permission [237] Copyright 2012, Elsevier. (b) Microstructure elastomer substrate. Reproduced with permission [238] Copyright 2018, Royal Society of Chemistry. (c) Elastomer composite. Reproduced with permission [239] Copyright 2014, Royal Society of Chemistry. (d) Porous composite based on a sponge. Reproduced with permission [240] Copyright 2016, Wiley. (e) Textile and thin films-cotton fiber substrate. Reproduced with permission [236] Copyright 2016, Royal Society of Chemistry. (f) Printed electronics substrate. Reproduced with permission [241] Copyright 2017, Wiley.
Figure 9Conductive elements (a) Conducting Polymer. Reproduced with permission [251] Copyright 2016, Elsevier. (b) MOF. Reproduced with permission [249] Copyright 2015, Wiley. (c) Ag NW conductive element. Reproduced with permission [236] Copyright 2016, Royal Society of Chemistry. (d) Graphene-based Microstructure Elastomer. Reproduced with permission [247] Copyright 2019, American Chemical Society (e) CNTs. Reproduced with permission [239] Copyright 2014, Royal Society of Chemistry.
Figure 10Effect of CNTs alignment on enhancing sensor performance.
Figure 11CB@PU Sponge. Reproduced with permission [240] Copyright 2016, Wiley. (a) Sketch of the crack-shaped slit organs near the leg joints of the spider. (b) SEM images of the microcrack junctions on a CB@PU sponge after compressing pre-treatment. (c) SEM images of an uncompressed CB@PU Sponge. (d) Comparison of mechanical properties of CB@PU Sponges with different Layer By Layer (LBL) deposition cycles of CB, a relative increase of CB mass on PU Sponges, (e) and an increase in conductivity of CB@PU Sponges. (f) with different LBL deposition cycles of CB. (g) Original signal of current curves for wrist pulse monitoring. (h) Zoomed waveform extracted from the original signal, showing some critical features that are essential for health monitoring.
Figure 12ACNT-Graphene@PDMS. Reproduced with permission [259] Copyright 2017, Wiley. (a) Schematic illustration showing the structure of the ACNT-Graphene pressure sensor. (b) SEM and optical images of continuous ACNT films drawn from VACNT arrays. (c) TEM image of ACNT-Graphene hybrid film. The areas marked by “G” indicate Graphene, and the area labelled by “ACNT” shows the ACNT film, and the regions mentioned by “ACNT/G” demonstrate the incorporation of ACNTs and Graphene. VACNT@PDMS. Reproduced with permission [260] Copyright 2017, American Chemical Society. (d) Digital image of the fabricated sensor. (e) Cross-sectional SEM image of the sensor. (f) Schematic illustration of the basic working principle of the sensor.
Summary of active materials, sensing principles used in wearable sensors along with their sensing properties.
| SN | Active Material | Sensing | Limit of | Maximum | Sensitivity | Reference | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0 | CNT/PDMS | Piezoresistive | 0.25 | 100.0 | 0.588 4 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Not all properties were reported (e.g., hysteresis, stability test). High limit of detection. |
| 2.0 | CNT@EcoFlex | Piezocapacitive | 50.0 | 1000 | 230 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Not all properties were reported (e.g., hysteresis, stability test). High limit of detection. |
| 3.0 | ACNT-Graphene | Piezoresistive | 0.0006 | 0.3 | 19.8 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Response time is <16.7 ms. 5 Stability for more than 35,000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Operating voltage is 0.03 V. 7 Low maximum detection. |
| 4.0 | CNT/PDMS | Piezoresistive | 0.0002 | 59.0 | 15.1 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Performance changed under cycle-test with constant pressure. Not all properties were reported. The operating voltage is 10.0 V. 7 |
| 5.0 | VACNT/PDMS | Piezoresistive | 0.002 | 10.0 | 0.3 and | [ |
Blood pressure measurement application without calibration, need to assess accuracy. Response time is around 162 ms. 5 Acceptable reproducibility over 5000 cycles of pressure loading/ unloading. 6 |
| 6.0 | SWCNTs/PDMS | Piezoresistive | 0.0006 | 1.2 | 1.8 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application but heart pulse. Response time is 10 ms. 5 Stability for around 67,500 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Operating voltage is 2.0 V. 7 |
| 7.0 | CB@PU Sponge | Piezoresistive | 0.091 | 16.4 | 0.068 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application but heart pulse. Stability for around 50,000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is 20 ms. 5 |
| 8.0 | MWCNT-rGO@PU Foam | Piezoresistive | 0.0035 | 2.7 | 0.022 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application but heart pulse. Stability for around 5000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is < 30 ms. 5 |
| 9.0 | SWCNTs/PDMS | Optical | 1.0 | - | 0.2 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Response time is 300 ms. 5 No stability test information was reported. Transparent optical application. |
| 10.0 | CNT/3D Microporous Elastomeric Dielectric Layer | Piezocapacitive | 0.0001 | 130 | 0.601 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application but heart pulse. Stability for around 1000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Operating voltage can be 1.0 V. 7 |
| 11.0 | Graphene@PU | Piezoresistive | 0.009 | 10.0 | 0.26 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application but heart pulse. Stability for around 10,000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Not all properties were reported. |
| 12.0 | Graphene | Piezoresistive | 0.1 | - | 3.4 × 10−6 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Response Time is 0.9 s. 5 Operating voltage is 2.5 V. 7 Not all properties were reported. |
| 13.0 | Graphene Paper | Piezocapacitive | 2.0 | 20.0 | 17.2 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application, but heart pulse. Response time is120 ms. 5 Stability for around 300 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Fabricated by Dip Coating. |
| 14.0 | Graphene Electrode | Piezocapacitive | 4.4 × 10−5 | - | 3.19 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application, but it sounds to be suitable for this application. The applied voltage is 3.3 V. 7 Stability for around 500 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is 30 ms. 5 |
| 15.0 | Graphene | Piezoresistive | 0.3 | 10.0 | 0.046 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application but heart pulse. Stability for around 200 loading/unloading cycles. 6 |
| 16.0 | Graphene Electrode | Piezocapacitive | 8.0 | - | 6.55 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 500 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is 70ms. 5 = |
| 17.0 | Suspended | Piezocapacitive | 80.0 | - | 123ZF | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Not all properties were reported. |
| 18.0 | Graphene Tribotronics | FET | 1.0 | - | 0.02 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 1700 loading/unloading cycles. 6 = Response time is 30 ms. 5 = Operating voltage can be 0.5 V. 7 = Suitable for electronic skin and touch screen applications. |
| 19.0 | rGO/PANI | Piezoresistive | 0.1 | 27.0 | 0.152 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Response time is around 96 ms. 5 = Stability for around 9000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 = High current output (i.e., ∼300 μA at 1.0 V. 7 = |
| 20.0 | PNIPAm/CMC/ rGO DN Hydrogel | Thermo-resisitive | - | 800.0 | - | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. It is also sensitive to temperature (30 °C–45 °C). |
| 21.0 | rGO/PU | Piezoresistive | 4.84 × 10−5 (1.1 mg) | - | 0.21 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 10,000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 = Response time is about 100 ms. 5 = Not all properties were reported. |
| 22.0 | rGO/PDMS Film | Piezoresistive | 0.0015 | 1.4 | 5.5 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Response time is 0.2 ms. 5 = Stability for around 5000 loading/unloading cycles at 100 Pa. 6 = The applied voltage is 1.0 V. 7 = |
| 23.0 | rGO Films with Continuous | Piezoresistive | 0.0042 | 3.0 | 178.0 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 1200 loading/unloading cycles. 6 = Response time is 131 ms. 5 = Operating Voltage can be 1.0 V. 7 = |
| 24.0 | Large-Scale | Piezoresistive | 0.003 | 3.0 | 50.9 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application but heart pulse. Stability for around 20,000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is 50 ms. 5 Operating Voltage can be 1.0 V. 7 |
| 25.0 | Graphene | Piezocapacitive | 4.4 × 10−5 | - | 7.68 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application but heart pulse. Stability for around 5000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 The applied voltage is 1.0 mV. 7 Response time is 30ms. 5 |
| 26.0 | Integrated | FET | 0.25 | 3000 | 2.05 × 10−4 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Response Time is 30 ms. 5 Stability for around 1000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 The gate voltage is 25.0 V. 7 |
| 27.0 | Graphene Transistor | FET | 0.16 mm−1 | - | - | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 1000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is 15 ms. 5 Gate voltage can be 2.0 V. 7 |
| 28.0 | Graphene | Piezoresistive | 0.028 | - | 480.0 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 4000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is 0.002 ms. 5 Operating voltage can be 5.0 V. 7 |
| 29.0 | 3D Graphene | Piezoresistive | 0.0002 | 75.0 | 110.0 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application but heart pulse. Stability for around 10,000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is 30 ms. 5 Operating voltage can be 3.0 V. 7 |
| 30.0 | GO (Spray Coating through a Stencil Mask) | Piezocapacitive | 0.24 × 10−3 | - | 0.8 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Response time is around 100 ms. 5 Maximum hysteresis is 5.0%@ 1.4 kPa. Stability for around 100 loading /unloading cycles. 6 |
| 31.0 | MoS2/GPN /Ecoflex | Piezoresistive | 0.6 | 25.4 | 6.06 | [ |
Suitable for blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 4000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response Time is 200 ms. 5 |
| 32.0 | PVA NWs/ Wrinkled | Piezoresistive | 0.00224 | - | 28.34 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 6000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 The applied voltage is 0.1V. 7 Not all properties were reported. |
| 33.0 | rGO Film/ | Piezoresistive | 0.0013 | 225.0 | 1.71 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 5000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is 6 ms. 5 Operating Voltage can be 1.0 V. 7 |
| 34.0 | P(VDF-TrFe) | Piezoresistive | 0.0012 | - | 15.6 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 100,000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is 5 ms. 5 The applied voltage is 1.0 mV. 7 |
| 35.0 | PEDOT:PSS | Piezoresistive | 0.023 | 8.0 | 10.3 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application but heart pulse. Response time 0.2 s. 5 Stability 800 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Applied Voltage is 0.2 V. 7 |
| 36.0 | PVDF-HFP/PEDOT | Piezoresistive | 0.001 | 30.0 | 13.5 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application but heart pulse. Stability for around 10,000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is around 0.4s. 5 The applied voltage is 1.0 V. 7 |
| 37.0 | P(VDF-TrFe) (Electrospun Nanofiber) | Piezoresistive | 0.0001 | 0.012 | 0.00041 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 10,000 loading / unloading cycles. 6 |
| 38.0 | [PPy@PVA-co-PE] and POE Nanofibers | Piezoresistive | 0.0013 | 7.0 | 1.24 | [ |
Suitable for blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 250 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Operating voltage can be 2.0 V. 7 |
| 39.0 | Au NWs/Tissue Paper | Piezoresistive | 0.013 | - | 1.14 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application but heart pulse. The operating voltage is 1.5 V 7 with low energy consumption that is <30 µW. Response time is <17 ms. 5 High Stability for around 50,000 loading/unloading cycles. |
| 40.0 | Au NP Densely Packed µNW based Pressure | Piezoresistive | 0.025 | 0.0801 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 6000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is <270 ms. 5 Not all properties were reported. | |
| 41.0 | Ag IDEs and PdOx NP | Piezoresistive | 0.0005 | 1.0 | 0.13 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 500 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Hysteresis induced by a 1.0 kPa applied pressure showed a shift of 0.012% from the initial value. |
| 42.0 | AG NWs | Piezocapacitive | 0.0006 | 115.0 | 1.54 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 5000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Not all properties were reported. |
| 43.0 | Ge/Si Core/shell NW PSR | FET | 1.0 | - | 42.7 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Response time is 1 ms.5 Operating voltage is 10 V. 7 Not all properties were reported. |
| 44.0 | MOF | Piezoresistive | 0.00073 | 3.0 | 6.25 | [ |
Suitable for blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 10,000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is 10 ms. 5 Operating voltage can be 1.0 V. 7 MOF is relatively expensive. |
| 45.0 | C-MOF/PANIF @PU Sponge | Piezoresistive | 0.001 | 60.0 | 158.26 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application, but heart pulse. Stability for around 15,000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is < 22 ms. 5 |
| 46.0 | C-MOF-5 | Piezoresistive | 0.02 | 1.0 | 15.63 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 2000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is < 65 ms. 5 Operating voltage is 3.0 V. 7 |
| 47.0 | MXenes | Piezoresistive | 0.0102 | 30.0 | 0.55 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 10,000 loading/unloading cycles.6 Response time is less than 11 ms.5 Operating voltage is 0.01 V.7 |
| 48.0 | MXenes | Piezoresistive | - | 0.351 | 7.5 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 4000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is < 30 ms. 5 Operating voltage is 1.0 V. 7 |
| 49.0 | Pt-coated | Piezoresistive | 0.005 | - | 11.35 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Response time is 50 ms. 5 Stability for around 10,000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 |
| 50.0 | ITO (3D Printed Mold) | Piezocapacitive | 0.003 | 4.0 | 1.62 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application but heart pulse. Stability for around 1000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Operating voltage can be 3.0 V. 7 Response time is < 10 ms. 5 |
| 51.0 | Ag Flexible Piezoelectret-Based Pressure Sensor | Piezoelectric | - | 2.5 | 15.0 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 36,000 loading/unloading cycles with constant pressure. 6 Perfluoro (alkoxy alkane) electret. Not all properties were reported. |
| 52.0 | ITO/PDMS | Piezocapacitive | 0.003 | 20.0 | 0.55 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Response time is 1.0 s. 5 Stability for around 10,000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 The gate voltage is higher than 5.0 V. 7 |
| 53.0 | Ag NWs (Embedded PDMS Electrode with Microarray Structure) | Piezocapacitive | 0.003 | 5.0 | 2.94 | [ |
No blood pressure measurement application. Stability for around 1000 loading/unloading cycles. 6 Response time is less than 50 ms. 5 Not all properties were reported. |
1 The smallest change that can be detected by a sensor. 2 The largest change that can be detected by a sensor. 3 The rate of change in output signal when responding to a change in stimulus. 4 Calculated Sensitivity. 5 The time interval within which a sensor can detect the smallest change in stimulus. 6 The rate of change in sensitivity and/or other sensor properties over continuous cycles of loading/unloading. 7 The sensor operating voltage should be as small as fractions of an mV to reduce power consumption, improve the battery life of the wearable system and/or support the integration with other energy harvesting applications.
Figure 13Effect of flexible 3D graphene structure with 2D electrical properties on sensor performance.
Figure 14Graphene produced by Direct Laser Scribing of PDMS film. Reproduced with permission [271] Copyright 2019, American Chemical Society. (a) Mechanism of direct laser scribing of PDMS film. (b) (i–v) Schematic illustration of the fabrication process. (vi) Photograph of a sensor attached to the skin. (c) Morphology of the produced graphene with enlarged views at the position marked by red dashed box (top view), yellow dashed box (side view), and blue dashed box (enlarged view within side view). Skin-like pressure sensor with wrinkled reduced graphene oxide. Reproduced with permission [282] Copyright 2019, Royal Society of Chemistry. (d) Schematic illustration showing the fabrication procedure of the skin-like wrinkle film. (e) The dome-like microstructure is compressed at stage 1, the contact sites between the rGO sheets increase as the air gaps disappear at stage 2, and the wrinkle ridge begins to spread flatly at stage 3, respectively.(f) Cross-sectional SEM images of before (top) and after (bottom) reduction of the wrinkle GO showing the appearance of air gaps.
Figure 15Effect of combined use of rGO and PVDF-TrFe nanofibers on sensor performance.
Figure 16Effect of adoption ultrathin NWs and imprinting to control patterns and orientation of functional materials on sensor performance.
Figure 17Performance of some MOF- and MXene-based sensors.
Figure 18Sensor electrodes. (a) Nanocomposite electrode. Reproduced with permission [321] Copyright 2019, Elsevier. (b) Patterned electrode. Reproduced with permission [322] Copyright 2017, Elsevier. (c) Conducting polymer. Reproduced with permission [323] Copyright 2017, Wiley. (d) Conductive texture. Reproduced under an open access creative commons CC BY 4.0 license [324] Copyright 2017, MDPI. (e) Metallic electrode. Reproduced with permission [325] Copyright 2016, American Chemical Society.
Figure 19Performance of some sensors based on metallic electrodes.
Figure 20Strategies for autonomous functions throughout the operational lifecycle.
List of self-healing mechanisms, along with some of their structure design properties.
| SN | Structure Design | Sensor Type | Self-Healing Mechanism | Self-Healing Material/Agent | Self-Healing | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0 | (f-BN NS)/PEDOT: PSS/PNIPam | Pressure | Chemical bond interaction-based (Hydrogen-bond) | - | 6.0 |
The self-healing starts at room temperature. |
| 2.0 | Ag NWs/rGO@m-PCL Microspheres onto PDMS [ | Strain | Solid Microsphere | Ag NWs/rGO@m-PCL Microspheres | 0.05 |
Heated at 80 °C for 1 min, then, self-healed for 3 min with a cut of 10 µm size. Acceptable conductive stability (25% drop in resistance) and sensitivity (0.16 rad−1 in bending downward direction) under cyclic bending. |
| 3.0 | MWCNT-PEDOT-PAM-PVA | Pressure | Chemical bond interaction-based (Hydrogen-bond) | - | ~1 s |
The self-healing property of the hydrogel was evaluated by restoring conductivity (i.e., ~96.0%) instantly. |
| 4.0 | Au NP/Sh-crl-PU | Gas analytes, pressure, strain, and temperature | Chemical bond interaction-based (Hydrogen-bond) | - | 48.0 |
The self-healing time of a cutting groove of ~ 150 µm was 30 min at room temperature. For compete cut into two pieces, it requires 48 h. Self-healing can occur between −20 °C–50°C After self-healing, composite recovered ~ 90% of tensile strength and ~97% of elongation in comparison with pristine Sh-Crl-PU. |
| 5.0 | (Ti3C2Tx)/PV) hydrogel | Strain | Chemical bond interaction-based (Hydrogen-bond) | - | ~0.15 s |
Instantaneous self-healing is ~0.15 s at room temperature. This sensor maintains its original performance after a self-healing. |
| 6.0 | PAA slightly crosslinked with PEG | Strain | Chemical bond interaction-based | - | 0.5 |
The self-healing time was 30 min at room temperature when the hydrogel is cut into two pieces and then reattached to each other even if directions of the two pieces were changed. |
| 7.0 | Ternary Composite DMSO-mixed PEDOT: PSS with Triton X-100 | Strain | Chemical bond interaction-based (Hydrogen-bond) | Triton X-100 | 1.0 s |
The self-healing behavior was observed with the film thickness ≥20 µm and cutting width ≤100 µm. |
| 8.0 | PETMP-TTT | - | Other Strategies | - | 0.083 |
Scratches produced on the PETMP-TTT polymer coatings with different constant loadings (1.2 N, 1.5 N, and 2.7 N) were completely self-healed after heating to 70 °C for 5 min. The crosslinked PETMP-TTT polymer network was also capable of initiating scratch recovery at ambient temperature conditions. |
| 9.0 | Conductive Polyimine Film (Dynamic Covalent Thermoset Polyimine with Ag NPs) | Flow, humidity, tactile, and temperature | Other Strategies | Re-healing agent (TAA-DETA-TREN with EToH and Ag NPs) | 4.0 |
The self-healing starts instantly. Heat-press (4 h at 80 °C and 8.5 kPa) was adopted to make the rehealed area more uniform and robust. This sensor is recyclable, too. |
| 10.0 | Stacked textile reinforcement with dual-channel | - | 3D Micro-vascular Networks | A mixture of DGEBA and Aliphatic amido-TETA | 48.0 |
Two patterns of microvascular networks were applied (i.e., Parallel, and Herringbone). Herringbone pattern enhances mixing through increased interfacial and overlapping fluid boundary layers. Self-healing starts at 30 °C. Evaluation of continuous self-healing cycle. |
| 11.0 | rGO based Composite | Pressure and flexion | Encapsulation | PBS confined in rGO networks with microscopic porosity | 24.0 |
The self-healing and full-recovery start at ambient temperature for both mechanical and electrical properties. |
| 12.0 | Self-healing magnet-polymer composite | Strain | Other Strategies | 0.167 |
The self-healing starts at ambient temperature when placing the torn edges of a test sample together between two glass slides while applying a magnetic field with an operating frequency of 475 kHz. Healing time is 10 min. Mn-Zn ferrite magnetic filler can trigger actuation, self-healing, and multiple cycle damage sensing. |
List of biocompatible and biodegradable materials used in wearable sensors as substrates and/or insulators.
| SN | Material | Material Category | Chemical Structure | Young Modulus (MPa)/ Elongation (%) | Bio-compatible | Bio-degradable | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0 | Cellulose Paper | Organic | - | 17.6 ± 0.7/14.0 ± 0.4 | Yes | Yes |
Mechanical property values are based on cellulose paper made of steam-exploded bamboo microfibers. Mechanical property values are Tensile Strength and Elongation at the break. It can be used as an insulator [ |
| 2.0 | Ecoflex Silicone Elastomer | Organic | - | 0.1/835 | Yes | - |
Elongation value is at ƐMax. It can be used as an insulator [ |
| 3.0 | PCL | Organic | [C6H10O2]n | 325±115/650± 350 | Yes | Yes |
Elongation value is at the break. It can be used as an insulator [ |
| 4.0 | PDMS | Organic | [C2H6OSi]n | Hyperplastic [ | Yes | - |
Usually used as a substrate [ |
| 5.0 | PES | Organic | [C12H8O3S]n | 3.76/47.66 | Yes | - |
Elongation value is at the break. Bio-PES can be synthesized [ It can be used as an insulator [ |
| 6.0 | PET | Organic | [C10H8O4]n | 19.59±0.22/1.87 ±0.03 | Yes | - |
Mechanical properties are for Neat PET. Elongation value is at the break. They are usually used as a substrate. It can be used as an insulator [ |
| 7.0 | PI | Organic | C35H28N2O7 | 2010/27.5 | Yes | - |
Mechanical properties are for Neat PI. Elongation value is at the break. They are usually used as a substrate. Bio-PI can be synthesized [ It can be used as an insulator or substrate [ |
| 8.0 | PLGA | Organic | C5H8O5 | - | Yes | Yes |
It can be used as an insulator [ |
| 9.0 | PVA | Organic | [C2H4O]n | Hyperplastic | Yes | Yes |
It can be used as an insulator [ |
| 10.0 | Silk | Organic | - | 6100/19.55 | Yes | Yes |
Mechanical properties are based on B. Mori Silk. Elongation value is at the break. Silk properties can be tuned when blending with other materials [ It can be used as an insulator [ |
| 11.0 | Shellac | Organic | - | Rheologic [ | Yes | Yes |
It can be used as an insulator [ |
| 12.0 | Sylgard Elastomer (184) | Organic | - | 2.4/135 | Yes | - |
Elongation value is at ƐMax. Elongation can be tuned when blending with other materials [ |
List of biocompatible and/or biodegradable materials used in wearable sensors as conductors.
| SN | Material | Material Category | Chemical Structure | Conductivity | Bio-compatible | Bio-degradable | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0 | Ag NWs | Inorganic | - | 6.3 × 107 | Yes | - |
They are used as an active material [ |
| 2.0 | CNTs | Organic | - | 103 − 6.7 × 106 | Yes | Yes |
CNT conductivity will highly depend on many parameters, such as structure and purity. Likewise, CNTs biodegradability will depend on many parameters, including concentration, size, and functionalization. However, the remaining part of CNTs that stay in the body and accumulate may lead to unknown long-term effects [ |
| 3.0 | Graphene | Inorganic | - | 7.095 × 104 | Yes | - |
Electrical conductivity is for pristine Graphene. Conductivity will highly depend on many parameters, including the structure and quality of as-made materials. They are used as an excellent conductor in electromechanically based sensors [ |
| 4.0 | MoS2 | Inorganic | - | 107 | Yes | - |
They are used as an active material, [ |
| 5.0 | PANI | Organic | - | 103–104 | Yes | - |
Electrical conductivity is influenced by the synthesis conditions such as current density, pH degree, and polymerization time [ They are used as an active material [ |
| 6.0 | PEDOT | Organic | - | (6.259 ± 1.468) × 105 | Yes | - |
Electrical conductivity can be enhanced through chemical treatment with Methanol [ They are used as an active material [ |
| 7.0 | PPy | Organic | - | 103–105 | Yes | - |
PANI and PPy can be similarly applied in biomedicine when solely their biological properties are considered [ They are used as an active material [ |
Figure 21Use of biomaterials in sensor key components.
Figure 22Summary of future development in the field of blood pressure measurement and real-time monitoring.