Bioinspired sandwich-structured pressure sensors based on graphene oxide/hydroxyl functionalized carbon nanotubes/bovine serum albumin nanocomposites for wearable textile electronics
•Bioinspired pressure sensors were fabricated based on facile layer-by-layer (LBL) self-assemble and dip-coating methods.•Hydrogen bond and electrostatic interactions were adopted to improve adhesion efficacy of the substrate with nanomaterials.•The textile-based bioinspired pressure sensors exhibit...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Composites. Part A, Applied science and manufacturing Applied science and manufacturing, 2022-12, Vol.163, p.107240, Article 107240 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Bioinspired pressure sensors were fabricated based on facile layer-by-layer (LBL) self-assemble and dip-coating methods.•Hydrogen bond and electrostatic interactions were adopted to improve adhesion efficacy of the substrate with nanomaterials.•The textile-based bioinspired pressure sensors exhibited enhanced pressure sensing performance.•The applications monitoring limb-kinetic and finger motions, and grasping motions using wearable were demonstrated.
Herein, inspired by the tactile perception architecture of human skin, including the epidermis and touch receptor, skin-like flexible pressure sensors were fabricated via the assembly of a sandwich structure composed of an encapsulation layer (bionic epidermis), a piezoresistive sensing layer (bionic touch receptor), and a transducer layer. The piezoresistive sensing layer composed of graphene oxide/ hydroxyl functionalized carbon nanotubes/bovine serum albumin (GO/CNTs/BSA) nanocomposites with wavy microstructures was fabricated using layer-by-layer (LBL) self-assembly technology. The mechanisms of hydrogen bond and electrostatic interactions may improve the adhesion efficacy of the textile substrate with conductive nanomaterials. Based on the skin-like architecture for pressure sensing, the sensor exhibited the sensing characteristics, including wide pressure-detecting range (0∼171 kPa), high sensitivity (2.456 kPa−1), rapid response/recovery time (225 ms and 50 ms), and outstanding durability (2000 cycles). Our work provide references for textile-based electronic devices that can be applied to intelligent robotics, wearable monitoring, and man–machine interaction. |
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ISSN: | 1359-835X 1878-5840 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.compositesa.2022.107240 |