TY - JOUR
T1 - Highly sensitive and very stretchable strain sensor based on a rubbery semiconductor
AU - Kim, Hae Jin
AU - Thukral, Anish
AU - Yu, Cunjiang
N1 - Funding Information:
This work is supported by the National Science Foundation (ECCS-1509763 and CMMI-1554499), the Doctoral New Investigator grant from American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund, and the Bill D. Cook faculty scholarship support from the University of Houston.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2018/2/7
Y1 - 2018/2/7
N2 - There is a growing interest in developing stretchable strain sensors to quantify the large mechanical deformation and strain associated with the activities for a wide range of species, such as humans, machines, and robots. Here, we report a novel stretchable strain sensor entirely in a rubber format by using a solution-processed rubbery semiconductor as the sensing material to achieve high sensitivity, large mechanical strain tolerance, and hysteresis-less and highly linear responses. Specifically, the rubbery semiconductor exploits π-π stacked poly(3-hexylthiophene-2,5-diyl) nanofibrils (P3HT-NFs) percolated in silicone elastomer of poly(dimethylsiloxane) to yield semiconducting nanocomposite with a large mechanical stretchability, although P3HT is a well-known nonstretchable semiconductor. The fabricated strain sensors exhibit reliable and reversible sensing capability, high gauge factor (gauge factor = 32), high linearity (R2 > 0.996), and low hysteresis (degree of hysteresis <12%) responses at the mechanical strain of up to 100%. A strain sensor in this format can be scalably manufactured and implemented as wearable smart gloves. Systematic investigations in the materials design and synthesis, sensor fabrication and characterization, and mechanical analysis reveal the key fundamental and application aspects of the highly sensitive and very stretchable strain sensors entirely from rubbers.
AB - There is a growing interest in developing stretchable strain sensors to quantify the large mechanical deformation and strain associated with the activities for a wide range of species, such as humans, machines, and robots. Here, we report a novel stretchable strain sensor entirely in a rubber format by using a solution-processed rubbery semiconductor as the sensing material to achieve high sensitivity, large mechanical strain tolerance, and hysteresis-less and highly linear responses. Specifically, the rubbery semiconductor exploits π-π stacked poly(3-hexylthiophene-2,5-diyl) nanofibrils (P3HT-NFs) percolated in silicone elastomer of poly(dimethylsiloxane) to yield semiconducting nanocomposite with a large mechanical stretchability, although P3HT is a well-known nonstretchable semiconductor. The fabricated strain sensors exhibit reliable and reversible sensing capability, high gauge factor (gauge factor = 32), high linearity (R2 > 0.996), and low hysteresis (degree of hysteresis <12%) responses at the mechanical strain of up to 100%. A strain sensor in this format can be scalably manufactured and implemented as wearable smart gloves. Systematic investigations in the materials design and synthesis, sensor fabrication and characterization, and mechanical analysis reveal the key fundamental and application aspects of the highly sensitive and very stretchable strain sensors entirely from rubbers.
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U2 - 10.1021/acsami.7b17709
DO - 10.1021/acsami.7b17709
M3 - Article
C2 - 29333853
AN - SCOPUS:85041928011
SN - 1944-8244
VL - 10
SP - 5000
EP - 5006
JO - ACS applied materials & interfaces
JF - ACS applied materials & interfaces
IS - 5
ER -