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Thin and Flexible Carbon Nanotube-Based Pressure Sensors with Ultrawide Sensing Range.

Sagar M DoshiErik T Thostenson
Published in: ACS sensors (2018)
A scalable electrophoretic deposition (EPD) approach is used to create novel thin, flexible, and lightweight carbon nanotube-based textile pressure sensors. The pressure sensors can be produced using an extensive variety of natural and synthetic fibers. These piezoresistive sensors are sensitive to pressures ranging from the tactile range (<10 kPa), the body weight range (∼500 kPa), and very high pressures (∼40 MPa). The EPD technique enables the creation of a uniform carbon nanotube-based nanocomposite coating, in the range of 250-750 nm thick, of polyethyleneimine (PEI) functionalized carbon nanotubes on nonconductive fibers. In this work, nonwoven aramid fibers are coated by EPD onto a backing electrode followed by film formation onto the fibers creating a conductive network. The electrically conductive nanocomposite coating is firmly bonded to the fiber surface and shows piezoresistive electrical/mechanical coupling. The pressure sensor displays a large in-plane change in electrical conductivity with applied out-of-plane pressure. In-plane conductivity change results from fiber/fiber contact as well as the formation of a sponge-like piezoresistive nanocomposite "interphase" between the fibers. The resilience of the nanocomposite interphase enables sensing of high pressures without permanent changes to the sensor response, showing high repeatability.
Keyphrases
  • carbon nanotubes
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • low cost
  • climate change
  • room temperature
  • quantum dots
  • high resolution
  • social support
  • molecularly imprinted