Abstract

The advancements in the areas of wearable devices and flexible electronic skin have led to the synthesis of scalable, ultrasensitive sensors to detect and differentiate multimodal stimuli and dynamic human movements. Herein, we reveal a novel architecture of an epidermal sensor fabricated by sandwiching the buckypaper between the layers of poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS). This mechanically robust sensor can be conformally adhered on skin and has the perception capability to detect real-time transient human motions and the multimodal mechanical stimuli of stretching, bending, tapping, and twisting. The sensor has feasibility for real-time health monitoring as it can distinguish a wide range of human physiological activities like breathing, gulping, phonation, pulse monitoring, and finger and wrist bending. This multimodal wearable epidermal sensor possesses an ultrahigh gauge factor (GF) of 9178 with a large stretchability of 56%, significant durability for 5000 stretching–releasing cycles, and a fast response/recovery time of 59/88 ms. We anticipate that this novel, simple, and scalable design of a sensor with outstanding features will pave a new way to consummate the requirements of wearable electronics, flexible touch sensors, and electronic skin.

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