Opto-Electronic Advances (Mar 2020)

Ultrasensitive skin-like wearable optical sensors based on glass micro/nanofibers

  • Zhang Lei,
  • Pan Jing,
  • Zhang Zhang,
  • Wu Hao,
  • Yao Ni,
  • Cai Dawei,
  • Xu Yingxin,
  • Zhang Jin,
  • Sun Guofei,
  • Wang Liqiang,
  • Geng Weidong,
  • Jin Wenguang,
  • Fang Wei,
  • Di Dawei,
  • Tong Limin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.29026/oea.2020.190022
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 3
pp. 190022-1 – 190022-7

Abstract

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Electronic skin, a class of wearable electronic sensors that mimic the functionalities of human skin, has made remarkable success in applications including health monitoring, human-machine interaction and electronic-biological interfaces. While electronic skin continues to achieve higher sensitivity and faster response, its ultimate performance is fundamentally limited by the nature of low-frequency AC currents. Herein, highly sensitive skin-like wearable optical sensors are demonstrated by embedding glass micro/nanofibers (MNFs) in thin layers of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS). Enabled by the transition from guided modes into radiation modes of the waveguiding MNFs upon external stimuli, the skin-like optical sensors show ultrahigh sensitivity (1870 kPa-1), low detection limit (7 mPa) and fast response (10 μs) for pressure sensing, significantly exceeding the performance metrics of state-of-the-art electronic skins. Electromagnetic interference (EMI)-free detection of high-frequency vibrations, wrist pulse and human voice are realized. Moreover, a five-sensor optical data glove and a 2×2-MNF tactile sensor are demonstrated. These initial results pave the way toward a new category of optical devices ranging from ultrasensitive wearable sensors to optical skins.

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