An autonomous wearable biosensor powered by a perovskite solar cell.
Jihong MinStepan DemchyshynJuliane R SempionattoYu SongBekele HailegnawChanghao XuYiran YangSamuel SolomonChristoph PutzLukas LehnerJulia Felicitas SchwarzClemens SchwarzingerMarkus ScharberEhsan Shirzaei SaniMartin KaltenbrunnerWei GaoPublished in: Nature electronics (2023)
Wearable sweat sensors can potentially be used to continuously and non-invasively monitor physicochemical biomarkers that contain information related to disease diagnostics and fitness tracking. However, the development of such autonomous sensors faces a number of challenges including achieving steady sweat extraction for continuous and prolonged monitoring, and addressing the high power demands of multifunctional and complex analysis. Here we report an autonomous wearable biosensor that is powered by a perovskite solar cell and can provide continuous and non-invasive metabolic monitoring. The device uses a flexible quasi-two-dimensional perovskite solar cell module that provides ample power under outdoor and indoor illumination conditions (power conversion efficiency exceeding 31% under indoor light illumination). We show that the wearable device can continuously collect multimodal physicochemical data - glucose, pH, sodium ions, sweat rate, and skin temperature - across indoor and outdoor physical activities for over 12 hours.
Keyphrases
- air pollution
- particulate matter
- single cell
- heart rate
- cell therapy
- physical activity
- room temperature
- quantum dots
- gold nanoparticles
- high efficiency
- sensitive detection
- healthcare
- health risk
- type diabetes
- drug delivery
- body composition
- adipose tissue
- health information
- insulin resistance
- low cost
- deep learning
- electronic health record
- solar cells
- blood glucose
- metabolic syndrome
- label free
- heavy metals
- solid state
- glycemic control