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Inkjet Printing of a Two-Dimensional Conductor for Cutaneous Biosignal MonitoringSaleh, Abdulelah 05 1900 (has links)
Wearables for health monitoring are rapidly advancing as evidenced by the number of wearable products on the market. More recently, the US Food and Drug Administration approved the Apple Watch for heart monitoring, indicating that wearables are going to be a part of our lives sooner than expected. However, wearables are still based on rigid, conventional electronic materials and fabrication procedures. The use of flexible conducting materials fabricated on flexible substrates allows for more comprehensive health monitoring because of the seamless integration and conformability of such devices with the human skin. Many materials can be used to fabricate flexible electronics such as thin metals, liquid metals, conducting polymers, and 1D and 2D materials. Ti3C2 MXene is a promising 2D material that shows flexibility as well as desirable electronic properties. Ti3C2 MXene is easily processable in aqueous solutions and can be an excellent functional ink for inkjet printing. Here we report the fabrication and the properties of Ti3C2 MXene films inkjet-printed from aqueous dispersions with a nonionic surfactant. The films are uniform and formed with only a few layers on glass and tattoo paper. The MXene films printed on tattoo are used to record ECG signals with comparable signal-to-noise ratio to commercial Ag/AgCl electrodes despite the absence of gels to lower skin-contact impedance. Due to their high charge storage capacity and mixed (ionic and electronic) conductivity, inkjet-printed MXene films open up a new avenue for applications beyond health monitoring.
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Soft Intelligence : Liquids Matter in Compliant MicrosystemsJeong, Seung Hee January 2016 (has links)
Soft matter, here, liquids and polymers, have adaptability to a surrounding geometry. They intrinsically have advantageous characteristics from a mechanical perspective, such as flowing and wetting on surrounding surfaces, giving compliant, conformal and deformable behavior. From the behavior of soft matter for heterogeneous surfaces, compliant structures can be engineered as embedded liquid microstructures or patterned liquid microsystems for emerging compliant microsystems. Recently, skin electronics and soft robotics have been initiated as potential applications that can provide soft interfaces and interactions for a human-machine interface. To meet the design parameters, developing soft material engineering aimed at tuning material properties and smart processing techniques proper to them are to be highly encouraged. As promising candidates, Ga-based liquid alloys and silicone-based elastomers have been widely applied to proof-of-concept compliant structures. In this thesis, the liquid alloy was employed as a soft and stretchable electrical and thermal conductor (resistor), interconnect and filler in an elastomer structure. Printing-based liquid alloy patterning techniques have been developed with a batch-type, parallel processing scheme. As a simple solution, tape transfer masking was combined with a liquid alloy spraying technique, which provides robust processability. Silicone elastomers could be tunable for multi-functional building blocks by liquid or liquid-like soft solid inclusions. The liquid alloy and a polymer additive were introduced to the silicone elastomer by a simple mixing process. Heterogeneous material microstructures in elastomer networks successfully changed mechanical, thermal and surface properties. To realize a compliant microsystem, these ideas have in practice been useful in designing and fabricating soft and stretchable systems. Many different designs of the microsystems have been fabricated with the developed techniques and materials, and successfully evaluated under dynamic conditions. The compliant microsystems work as basic components to build up a whole system with soft materials and a processing technology for our emerging society.
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