posted on 2021-04-29, 08:44authored byZixuan Wu, Haojun Ding, Kai Tao, Yaoming Wei, Xuchun Gui, Wenxiong Shi, Xi Xie, Jin Wu
Conductive hydrogels can be used
in wearable electronics integrated
with skin, but the bulk structure of existing hydrogel-based temperature
sensors limits the wearing comfort, response/recovery speeds, and
sensitivity. Here, stretchable and transparent temperature sensors
based on a novel thin-film sandwich structure (TFSS) are designed,
which display unprecedented thermal sensitivity (24.54%/°C),
fast response time (0.19 s) and recovery time (0.08 s), a broad detection
range (from −28 to 95.3 °C), high resolution (0.8 °C),
and high stability. The thin hydrogel layer (12.15 μm) is encapsulated
by two thin elastomer layers, which prevent the water evaporation
and enhance the heat transfer, leading to the boosted stability and
accelerated response/recovery speeds. The nondrying and antifreezing
capabilities are further promoted by the hydratable lithium bromide
(LiBr) incorporated in the hydrogel, enabling it to avoid dehydration
in an extremely arid environment and freeze below subzero temperatures
(freezing point below −120 °C). A comparative study reveals
that the thermal sensitivity displayed by the TFSS sensor in capacitance
mode is several times higher than that in conventional conductance/resistance
mode above room temperature. Importantly, a new mechanism based on
a horizontal plate capacitance model is proposed to understand the
high sensitivity by considering the permittivity and geometry variations
of TFSS. The thin TFSS, stretchability and transparency enable the
sensor to be conformally and comfortably attached to human skin for
real-time and reliable monitoring of various human motions, physical
states, skin temperature, etc., without affecting the appearance.