posted on 2022-12-28, 20:05authored byShizhuo Zhang, Haoqing Jiang, Shuai Wang, Jun Yuan, Wendi Yi, Lingfeng Wang, Xiaowei Liu, Feng Liu, Gary J. Cheng
Wearable sweat sensors have been developed rapidly in
recent years
due to the great potential in health monitoring. Developing a convenient
manufacturing process and a novel structure to realize timeliness
and continuous monitoring of sweat is crucial for the practical application
of sweat sensors. Herein, inspired by the striped grooves and granular
structures of bamboo leaves, we realized an epidermal patch with biomimetic
multilevel structural microfluidic channels for timeliness monitoring
of sweat via 3D printing and femtosecond laser processing. The striped
grooves and ridges are alternately arranged at the bottom of the microfluidic
channels, and the surface of the ridges has rough granular structures.
The striped grooves improve the capillary effect in the microchannels
by dividing the microchannels, and the granular structures enhance
the slip effect of sweat by increasing surface hydrophobicity. The
experimental results show that compared with the conventional microfluidic
channels, the water collecting rate of the biomimetic microchannels
increased by about 60%, which is consistent with the theoretical analysis.
The superior sweat-collecting efficiency in the epidermal patch with
the biomimetic multistructure enables sensitive, continuous, and stable
monitoring of sweat physiological signals. Besides, this work provides
new design and manufacturing approaches for other microfluidic applications.