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Self-Powered, Ultrasensitive, Flexible Tactile Sensors Based on Contact Electrification

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posted on 2014-06-11, 00:00 authored by Guang Zhu, Wei Qing Yang, Tiejun Zhang, Qingshen Jing, Jun Chen, Yu Sheng Zhou, Peng Bai, Zhong Lin Wang
Tactile/touch sensing is essential in developing human-machine interfacing and electronic skins for areas such as automation, security, and medical care. Here, we report a self-powered triboelectric sensor based on flexible thin-film materials. It relies on contact electrification to generate a voltage signal in response to a physical contact without using an external power supply. Enabled by the unique sensing mechanism and surface modification by polymer-nanowires, the triboelectric sensor shows an exceptional pressure sensitivity of 44 mV/Pa (0.09% Pa–1) and a maximum touch sensitivity of 1.1 V/Pa (2.3% Pa–1) in the extremely low-pressure region (<0.15 KPa). Through integration of the sensor with a signal-processing circuit, a complete tactile sensing system is further developed. Diverse applications of the system are demonstrated, explicitly indicating a variety of immediate uses in human-electronics interface, automatic control, surveillance, remote operation, and security systems.

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