| Literature DB >> 35076218 |
Bohao Liu1, Alberto Libanori2, Yihao Zhou2, Xiao Xiao2, Guangzhong Xie1, Xun Zhao2, Yuanjie Su1, Si Wang3, Zhen Yuan1, Zaihua Duan1, Junge Liang1, Yadong Jiang1, Huiling Tai1, Jun Chen2.
Abstract
The high moisture level of exhaled gases unavoidably limits the sensitivity of breath analysis via wearable bioelectronics. Inspired by pulmonary lobe expansion/contraction observed during respiration, a respiration-driven triboelectric sensor (RTS) was devised for simultaneous respiratory biomechanical monitoring and exhaled acetone concentration analysis. A tin oxide-doped polyethyleneimine membrane was devised to play a dual role as both a triboelectric layer and an acetone sensing material. The prepared RTS exhibited excellent ability in measuring respiratory flow rate (2-8 L/min) and breath frequency (0.33-0.8 Hz). Furthermore, the RTS presented good performance in biochemical acetone sensing (2-10 ppm range at high moisture levels), which was validated via finite element analysis. This work has led to the development of a novel real-time active respiratory monitoring system and strengthened triboelectric-chemisorption coupling sensing mechanism.Entities:
Keywords: acetone sensing; bioelectronics; breath analysis; permittivity; respiration monitoring
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35076218 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c22457
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229