Ultraflexible Glassy Semiconductor Fibers for Thermal Sensing and Positioning.
Ting ZhangZhe WangBhuvanesh SrinivasanZhixun WangJing ZhangKaiwei LiCatherine Boussard-PledelJohann TrolesBruno BureauLei WeiPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2019)
Flexible, large-area, and low-cost thermal sensing networks with high spatial and temporal resolution are of profound importance in addressing the increasing needs for industrial processing, medical diagnosis, and military defense. Here, a thermoelectric (TE) fiber is fabricated by thermally codrawing a macroscopic preform containing a semiconducting glass core and a polymer cladding to deliver thermal sensor functionalities at fiber-optic length scales, flexibility, and uniformity. The resulting TE fiber sensor operates in a wide temperature range with high thermal detection sensitivity and accuracy, while offering ultraflexibility with the bending curvature radius below 2.5 mm. Additionally, a single TE fiber can either sense the spot temperature variation or locate the heat/cold spot on the fiber. As a proof of concept, a two-dimensional 3 × 3 fiber array is woven into a textile to simultaneously detect the temperature distribution and the position of heat/cold source with the spatial resolution of millimeter. Achieving this may lead to the realization of large-area, flexible, and wearable temperature sensing fabrics for wearable electronics and advanced artificial intelligence applications.
Keyphrases
- artificial intelligence
- low cost
- healthcare
- machine learning
- deep learning
- big data
- wastewater treatment
- single molecule
- blood pressure
- intellectual disability
- heat stress
- high throughput
- high resolution
- autism spectrum disorder
- optical coherence tomography
- ionic liquid
- quantum dots
- single cell
- optic nerve
- walled carbon nanotubes