Stretchable Sweat-Activated Battery in Skin-Integrated Electronics for Continuous Wireless Sweat Monitoring.
Yiming LiuXingcan HuangJingkun ZhouChun Ki YiuZhen SongWei HuangSina Khazaee NejadHu LiTsz Hung WongKuanming YaoLing ZhaoWoojung YooWooyoung ParkJiyu LiYa HuangHiuwai Raymond LamEnming SongXu GuoYanwei WangZhenxue DaiLingqian ChangWen Jung LiZhaoqian XieXinge YuPublished in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2022)
Wearable electronics have attracted extensive attentions over the past few years for their potential applications in health monitoring based on continuous data collection and real-time wireless transmission, which highlights the importance of portable powering technologies. Batteries are the most used power source for wearable electronics, but unfortunately, they consist of hazardous materials and are bulky, which limit their incorporation into the state-of-art skin-integrated electronics. Sweat-activated biocompatible batteries offer a new powering strategy for skin-like electronics. However, the capacity of the reported sweat-activated batteries (SABs) cannot support real-time data collection and wireless transmission. Focused on this issue, soft, biocompatible, SABs are developed that can be directly integrated on skin with a record high capacity of 42.5 mAh and power density of 7.46 mW cm -2 among the wearable sweat and body fluids activated batteries. The high performance SABs enable powering electronic devices for a long-term duration, for instance, continuously lighting 120 lighting emitting diodes (LEDs) for over 5 h, and also offers the capability of powering Bluetooth wireless operation for real-time recording of physiological signals for over 6 h. Demonstrations of the SABs for powering microfluidic system based sweat sensors are realized in this work, allowing real-time monitoring of pH, glucose, and Na + in sweat.
Keyphrases
- low cost
- soft tissue
- solid state
- wound healing
- heart rate
- public health
- electronic health record
- light emitting
- high throughput
- type diabetes
- single cell
- drug delivery
- drug release
- climate change
- machine learning
- circulating tumor cells
- adipose tissue
- human health
- deep learning
- health information
- artificial intelligence
- glycemic control
- energy transfer