posted on 2023-07-05, 19:36authored byPengsu Mao, Haoran Li, Xin Shan, Melissa Davis, Te Tang, Yugang Zhang, Xiao Tong, Yan Xin, Jiang Cheng, Lu Li, Zhibin Yu
Healthcare systems worldwide have been stressed to provide
sufficient
resources to serve the increasing and aging population in our society.
The situation became more challenging at the time of pandemic. Technology
advancement, especially the adoption of wearable health monitoring
devices, has provided an important supplement to current clinical
equipment. Most health monitoring devices are rigid, however, human
tissues are soft. Such a difference has prohibited intimate contact
between the two and jeopardized wearing comfortableness, which hurdles
measurement accuracy especially during longtime usage. Here, we report
a soft and stretchable photodiode that can conformally adhere onto
the human body without any pressure and measure cardiovascular variables
for an extended period with higher reliability than commercial devices.
The photodiode used a composite light absorber consisting of an organic
bulk heterojunction embedded into an elastic polymer matrix. It is
discovered that the elastic polymer matrix not only improves the morphology
of the bulk heterojunction for obtaining the desired mechanical properties
but also alters its electronic band structure and improves the electrical
properties that lead to a reduced dark current and enhanced photovoltage
in the stretchable photodiode. The work has demonstrated high fidelity
measurements and longtime monitoring of heat rate variability and
oxygen saturation, potentially enabling next-generation wearable photoplethysmography
devices for point-of-care diagnosis of cardiovascular diseases in
a more accessible and affordable way.