Interactive Skin Display with Epidermal Stimuli Electrode
In addition to the demand for stimuli‐responsive sensors that can detect various vital signals in epidermal skin, the development of electronic skin displays that quantitatively detect and visualize various epidermal stimuli such as the temperature, sweat gland activity, and conductance simultaneous...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Advanced science 2019-07, Vol.6 (13), p.1802351-n/a |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In addition to the demand for stimuli‐responsive sensors that can detect various vital signals in epidermal skin, the development of electronic skin displays that quantitatively detect and visualize various epidermal stimuli such as the temperature, sweat gland activity, and conductance simultaneously are of significant interest for emerging human‐interactive electronics used in health monitoring. Herein, a novel interactive skin display with epidermal stimuli electrode (ISDEE) allowing for the simultaneous sensing and display of multiple epidermal stimuli on a single device is presented. It is based on a simple two‐layer architecture on a topographically patterned elastomeric polymer composite with light‐emitting inorganic phosphors, upon which two electrodes are placed with a certain parallel gap. The ISDEE is directly mounted on human skin, which by itself serves as a field‐responsive floating electrode of the display operating under an alternating current (AC). The AC field exerted on the epidermal skin layer depends on the conductance of the skin, which can be modulated based on a variety of physiological skin factors, such as the temperature, sweat gland activity, and pressure. Conductance‐dependent field‐induced electroluminescence is achieved, giving rise to an on‐hand sensing display platform where a variety of human information can be directly sensed and visualized.
An interactive skin display is demonstrated with an epidermal stimuli electrode, allowing for simultaneous sensing and display on a single device. The device is directly mounted on skin, which by itself serves as a field‐responsive floating electrode. The alternating current (AC) field exerted on the epidermal depends on the conductance, giving rise to an on‐hand multimode and multifunctional sensing display. |
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ISSN: | 2198-3844 2198-3844 |
DOI: | 10.1002/advs.201802351 |