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A wirelessly programmable, skin-integrated thermo-haptic stimulator system for virtual reality.

Jae-Hwan KimAbraham Vázquez-GuardadoHaiwen LuanJin-Tae KimDa Som YangHaohui ZhangJan-Kai ChangSeonggwang YooChanho ParkYuanting WeiZach ChristiansenSeungyeob KimRaudel AvilaJong Uk KimYoung Joong LeeHee-Sup ShinMingyu ZhouSung Woo JeonJanice Mihyun BaekYujin LeeSo Young KimJaeman LimMinsu ParkHyoyoung JeongSang Min WonRenkun ChenYonggang HuangYei Hwan JungJae-Young YooJohn A Rogers
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2024)
Sensations of heat and touch produced by receptors in the skin are of essential importance for perceptions of the physical environment, with a particularly powerful role in interpersonal interactions. Advances in technologies for replicating these sensations in a programmable manner have the potential not only to enhance virtual/augmented reality environments but they also hold promise in medical applications for individuals with amputations or impaired sensory function. Engineering challenges are in achieving interfaces with precise spatial resolution, power-efficient operation, wide dynamic range, and fast temporal responses in both thermal and in physical modulation, with forms that can extend over large regions of the body. This paper introduces a wireless, skin-compatible interface for thermo-haptic modulation designed to address some of these challenges, with the ability to deliver programmable patterns of enhanced vibrational displacement and high-speed thermal stimulation. Experimental and computational investigations quantify the thermal and mechanical efficiency of a vertically stacked design layout in the thermo-haptic stimulators that also supports real-time, closed-loop control mechanisms. The platform is effective in conveying thermal and physical information through the skin, as demonstrated in the control of robotic prosthetics and in interactions with pressure/temperature-sensitive touch displays.
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