Sensors (Jul 2021)

Screen Printing Carbon Nanotubes Textiles Antennas for Smart Wearables

  • Isidoro Ibanez Labiano,
  • Dilan Arslan,
  • Elif Ozden Yenigun,
  • Amir Asadi,
  • Hulya Cebeci,
  • Akram Alomainy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s21144934
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 14
p. 4934

Abstract

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Electronic textiles have become a dynamic research field in recent decades, attracting attention to smart wearables to develop and integrate electronic devices onto clothing. Combining traditional screen-printing techniques with novel nanocarbon-based inks offers seamless integration of flexible and conformal antenna patterns onto fabric substrates with a minimum weight penalty and haptic disruption. In this study, two different fabric-based antenna designs called PICA and LOOP were fabricated through a scalable screen-printing process by tuning the conductive ink formulations accompanied by cellulose nanocrystals. The printing process was controlled and monitored by revealing the relationship between the textiles’ nature and conducting nano-ink. The fabric prototypes were tested in dynamic environments mimicking complex real-life situations, such as being in proximity to a human body, and being affected by wrinkling, bending, and fabric care such as washing or ironing. Both computational and experimental on-and-off-body antenna gain results acknowledged the potential of tunable material systems complimenting traditional printing techniques for smart sensing technology as a plausible pathway for future wearables.

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