Abstract

Electronic textiles, also known as smart textiles or smart fabrics, are one of the best form factors that enable electronics to be embedded in them, presenting physical flexibility and sizes that cannot be achieved with other existing electronic manufacturing techniques. As part of smart textiles, e-sensors for human movement monitoring have attracted tremendous interest from researchers in recent years. Although there have been outstanding developments, smart e-textile sensors still present significant challenges in sensitivity, accuracy, durability, and manufacturing efficiency. This study proposes a two-step approach (from structure layers and shape) to actively enhance the performance of e-textile strain sensors and improve manufacturing ability for the industry. Indeed, the fabricated strain sensors based on the silver paste/single-walled carbon nanotube (SWCNT) layers and buffer cutting lines have fast response time, low hysteresis, and are six times more sensitive than SWCNT sensors alone. The e-textile sensors are integrated on a glove for monitoring the angle of finger motions. Interestingly, by attaching the sensor to the skin of the neck, the pharynx motions when speaking, coughing, and swallowing exhibited obvious and consistent signals. This research highlights the effect of the shapes and structures of e-textile strain sensors in the operation of a wearable e-textile system. This work also is intended as a starting point that will shape the standardization of strain fabric sensors in different applications.

Highlights

  • Strain textile sensors enable close fitting on curvilinear surfaces or direct attachment to clothes that are very important in the new generation of portable and wearable electronics [1,2,3]

  • This work is intended as a starting point that will shape the standardization of strain fabric sensors in different applications

  • We have proposed a two-step approach in the fabrication and optimization

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Summary

Introduction

Strain textile sensors enable close fitting on curvilinear surfaces or direct attachment to clothes that are very important in the new generation of portable and wearable electronics [1,2,3]. Chen et al [17] prepared a PPy-coated stretchable textile via a to havelow-temperature highly sensitiveinterfacial materials suitable for wearable. Function as a sensitive particular attention to complex or fabrication that will sensitive increase materials the difficulty in studies on stretch sensors materials [18,19,20,21,22] were conclusively technologies proven to have highly suitable for wearable devices. Materials or fabrication will increase difficulty in the manufacturing process, This research proposestechnologies a two-stepthat approach, notthe only in fabrication and in the optimal cost, and ability in mass production. A combination of Ag pastes/SWCNTs addresses the issues of poor gauge factor (GF) at performance of the e-textile strain sensors.

Materials and Methods
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Shape of the Sensors
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