Traditional capacitive sensors suffer from significant parasitic noise when used in liquid environments or inside the human body. The parasitic noise overwhelms the force response of the sensor and makes it impossible to calculate the absolute force experienced by the sensor. This article focuses on the development of a supercapacitor based force sensor that is immune to parasitic noise. The supercapacitor consists of co-planar electrodes and a solid state ionic gel electrolyte on a deformable membrane. Force exertion causes deformation of the electrolyte membrane, increases its area of contact with the electrodes, resulting in a change of capacitance. The sensor is sealed, waterproof, and shows absolutely no changes in capacitance when immersed in water or enclosed in extracted sheep tissue. At the same time, its force sensitivity of 0.13 F/N exceeds the 0.3 pF/N sensitivity of a traditional capacitive sensor by 6 orders of magnitude. The developed sensor could have many biomedical applications in which parasitic capacitance is a serious challenge.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5880046PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/LSENS.2017.2766198DOI Listing

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