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Flexible 3D Architectured Piezo/Thermoelectric Bimodal Tactile Sensor Array for E‐Skin Application
Author(s) -
Zhu Pengcheng,
Wang Yalong,
Wang Yao,
Mao Hongye,
Zhang Qiang,
Deng Yuan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
advanced energy materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.08
H-Index - 220
eISSN - 1614-6840
pISSN - 1614-6832
DOI - 10.1002/aenm.202001945
Subject(s) - electronic skin , materials science , tactile sensor , pressure sensor , piezoelectricity , thermoelectric effect , sensitivity (control systems) , response time , optoelectronics , polyaniline , 3d printing , piezoresistive effect , nanotechnology , acoustics , computer science , mechanical engineering , electronic engineering , robot , artificial intelligence , polymer , composite material , physics , thermodynamics , computer graphics (images) , engineering , polymerization
Electronic skin (e‐skin) functions as human–machines interaction interfaces, holding great promise in future personal health monitoring and endowing robots with capability of sense of touch. Despite recent exciting progress in e‐skin research, accurate discrimination of various tactile inputs remains a great challenge yet. A 3D processing technique is demonstrated here combining laser fabrication and screen printing to construct vertically architectured pressure/temperature bimodal active sensor employing all organic functional materials, i.e., piezoelectric poly(vinylidene fluoride‐ co ‐trifluoroethylene) and thermoelectric polyaniline‐based composites. The sensor transforms pressure and temperature stimuli into two independent electrical signals without interference, exhibiting high temperature sensing sensitivity (109.4 µV K −1 ) with rapid response time (0.37 s) and superior pressure sensing sensitivity over a wide range (100 Pa to 20 kPa). Finite element analyses further explain the thermal harvesting performance of the sensor. Applications of sensor as e‐skin in various temperature/stress perception scenarios and its stability are demonstrated. Further, a 4 × 4 pixel bimodal tactile sensor array is integrated for the first time, presenting accurate spatial distribution mapping of pressure/temperature signals simultaneously without interference, and functions without external power supply due to its intrinsic working principle. This study thus moves a step toward multifunctional flexible electronics for e‐skin applications.