Current On-Skin Flexible Sensors, Materials, Manufacturing Approaches, and Study Trends for Health Monitoring: A Review.
Rodrigo G FerreiraAbilio P SilvaJoão Nunes-PereiraPublished in: ACS sensors (2024)
Due to an ever-increasing amount of the population focusing more on their personal health, thanks to rising living standards, there is a pressing need to improve personal healthcare devices. These devices presently require laborious, time-consuming, and convoluted procedures that heavily rely on cumbersome equipment, causing discomfort and pain for the patients during invasive methods such as sample-gathering, blood sampling, and other traditional benchtop techniques. The solution lies in the development of new flexible sensors with temperature, humidity, strain, pressure, and sweat detection and monitoring capabilities, mimicking some of the sensory capabilities of the skin. In this review, a comprehensive presentation of the themes regarding flexible sensors, chosen materials, manufacturing processes, and trends was made. It was concluded that carbon-based composite materials, along with graphene and its derivates, have garnered significant interest due to their electromechanical stability, extraordinary electrical conductivity, high specific surface area, variety, and relatively low cost.
Keyphrases
- low cost
- healthcare
- public health
- end stage renal disease
- mental health
- health information
- newly diagnosed
- soft tissue
- ejection fraction
- chronic pain
- chronic kidney disease
- solid state
- pain management
- wound healing
- prognostic factors
- health promotion
- spinal cord injury
- patient reported outcomes
- patient reported
- spinal cord
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- carbon nanotubes