Nature Communications (Nov 2024)

Mormyroidea-inspired electronic skin for active non-contact three-dimensional tracking and sensing

  • Jingkun Zhou,
  • Jian Li,
  • Huiling Jia,
  • Kuanming Yao,
  • Shengxin Jia,
  • Jiyu Li,
  • Guangyao Zhao,
  • Chun Ki Yiu,
  • Zhan Gao,
  • Dengfeng Li,
  • Binbin Zhang,
  • Ya Huang,
  • Qiuna Zhuang,
  • Yawen Yang,
  • Xingcan Huang,
  • Mengge Wu,
  • Yiming Liu,
  • Yuyu Gao,
  • Hu Li,
  • Yue Hu,
  • Rui Shi,
  • Meenakshi Mukherji,
  • Zijian Zheng,
  • Xinge Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-54249-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

Read online

Abstract The capacity to discern and locate positions in three-dimensional space is crucial for human-machine interfaces and robotic perception. However, current soft electronics can only obtain two-dimensional spatial locations through physical contact. In this study, we report a non-contact position targeting concept enabled by transparent and thin soft electronic skin (E-skin) with three-dimensional sensing capabilities. Inspired by the active electrosensation of mormyroidea fish, this E-skin actively ascertains the 3D positions of targeted objects in a contactless manner and can wirelessly convey the corresponding positions to other devices in real-time. Consequently, this E-skin readily enables interaction with machines, i.e., manipulating virtual objects, controlling robotic arms, and drones in either virtual or actual 3D space. Additionally, it can be integrated with robots to provide them with 3D situational awareness for perceiving their surroundings, avoiding obstacles, or tracking targets.