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Printed Strain Sensor with High Sensitivity and Wide Working Range Using a Novel Brittle-Stretchable Conductive Network.

Yi-Fei WangTomohito SekineYasunori TakedaJinseo HongAyako YoshidaHiroyuki MatsuiDaisuke KumakiTakao NishikawaTakeo ShibaTadahiro SunagaShizuo Tokito
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2020)
There are few reports on resistive strain sensors that exhibit both high sensitivity and a wide working range under stretching. We have newly developed a high-performance strain sensor based on a brittle-stretchable conductive network that consists of both brittle and stretchable conductive layers and is fabricated on a stretchable substrate using the screen-printing method. Adding strain usually generates structural cracks in brittle conductive layers leading to a significant increase in resistance, while a stretchable conductive layer bridges these cracks to maintain the conductive pathways under high-strain conditions. This novel conductive network endows superior electrical-mechanical performance to the strain sensors, which possess high sensitivity (gauge factor > 870) over the entire working range (∼100%). Additionally, the developed sensors showed unique anisotropic bend-sensing characteristics, which could be used to detect the bending directions. This high degree of comprehensive performance results in a strain sensor with the capability for full-range human motion detection and robotic motion sensing.
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