Femtosecond Laser-Induced Supermetalphobicity for Design and Fabrication of Flexible Tactile Electronic Skin Sensor

  • Chengjun Zhang
  • , Zhikang Li
  • , Haoyu Li
  • , Qing Yang
  • , Hao Wang
  • , Chao Shan
  • , Jingzhou Zhang
  • , Xun Hou
  • , Feng Chen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

66 Scopus citations

Abstract

Pursuing flexible tactile electronic skin sensors with superior comprehensive performances is highly desired in practical applications. However, current flexible tactile electronic skin sensors suffer insufficient flexibility and sensitivity, as well as high-cost and low-efficiency in fabrication, and are susceptible to contamination in sensing performances. Here, a highly sensitive all-flexible tactile sensor (AFTS) is presented with capacitive sensing that combines a double-side micropyramids dielectric layer and a liquid metal (LM) electrode. The design and fabrication of LM-based AFTS are based on supermetalphobicity induced by femtosecond laser. The supermetalphobic micropyramids lead to a high sensitivity up to 2.78 kPa-1, an ultralow limit of detection of ∼3 Pa, a fast response time of 80 ms, and an excellent durability of cyclic load over 10 »000 times. The used femtosecond laser enables programmable, high-efficiency, low-cost, and large-scale fabrication of supermetalphobic double-side micropyramids, which is difficult to implement using conventional techniques. Furthermore, the outer substrates are treated by a femtosecond laser, endowing the AFTS with excellent antifouling performance and stable sensing signals in the highly humid environment. Successful monitoring of human physiological and motion signals demonstrates the potential of our developed AFTS for wearable biomonitoring applications.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)38328-38338
Number of pages11
JournalACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
Volume14
Issue number33
DOIs
StatePublished - 24 Aug 2022

Keywords

  • double-side micropyrmaids
  • femtosecond laser fabrication
  • flexible tactile electronic skin sensors
  • liquid metal
  • supermetalphobicity

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