| Literature DB >> 32930454 |
Ming Wang1, Yifei Luo1, Ting Wang1, Changjin Wan1, Liang Pan1, Shaowu Pan1, Ke He1, Aden Neo1, Xiaodong Chen1.
Abstract
Skin is the largest organ, with the functionalities of protection, regulation, and sensation. The emulation of human skin via flexible and stretchable electronics gives rise to electronic skin (e-skin), which has realized artificial sensation and other functions that cannot be achieved by conventional electronics. To date, tremendous progress has been made in data acquisition and transmission for e-skin systems, while the implementation of perception within systems, that is, sensory data processing, is still in its infancy. Integrating the perception functionality into a flexible and stretchable sensing system, namely artificial skin perception, is critical to endow current e-skin systems with higher intelligence. Here, recent progress in the design and fabrication of artificial skin perception devices and systems is summarized, and challenges and prospects are discussed. The strategies for implementing artificial skin perception utilize either conventional silicon-based circuits or novel flexible computing devices such as memristive devices and synaptic transistors, which enable artificial skin to surpass human skin, with a distributed, low-latency, and energy-efficient information-processing ability. In future, artificial skin perception would be a new enabling technology to construct next-generation intelligent electronic devices and systems for advanced applications, such as robotic surgery, rehabilitation, and prosthetics.Entities:
Keywords: artificial skin; edging and neuromorphic computing; electronic skin; skin perception; soft robotics
Year: 2020 PMID: 32930454 DOI: 10.1002/adma.202003014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849