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Crosstalk-free graphene-liquid elastomer based printed sensors for unobtrusive respiratory monitoring.

Simran SharmaAnkur ThapaSumit SinghTitash Mondal
Published in: Nanoscale (2024)
Flexible strain sensors have garnered attraction in the human healthcare domain. However, caveats like crosstalk and noise associated with the output signal of such a sensor often limit the accuracy. Hence, developing a strain sensor via frugal engineering is critical, thereby warranting its mass utility. A stencil printable graphene/liquid elastomeric crosstalk-free strain sensor for unobtrusive respiratory monitoring is reported herein. Printing supports the frugality of the process and avoids complex fabrication. The sensor was mounted on a wearable mask, and the sensor console was fabricated. The console demonstrated the capability to detect the respiratory profile at room and low temperature (-26 °C) with an SNR of -12.85 dB. Developed sensors could nullify the impact of temperature and humidity and generate respiratory signals due to strain induced by breathing. A model experiment was conducted to support the fidelity of the strain mechanism. The console demonstrated excellent stability (over 500 cycles) with a sensitivity of -196.56 (0-0.17% strain) and 117.49 (0.17-0.34% strain). The console could accurately determine conditions like eupnea, tachypnoea, etc ., and transmit the data wirelessly via Bluetooth. These findings solve major caveats in flexible sensor development by focusing on selectivity, sensitivity, and stability.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • low cost
  • endothelial cells
  • air pollution
  • pluripotent stem cells