M13 Bacteriophage-Assisted Morphological Engineering of Crack-Based Sensors for Highly Sensitive and Wide Linear Range Strain Sensing.

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces

Department of Nano Fusion Technology and BK21 Plus Nano Convergence Technology Division, Pusan National University, Busan 46214, Republic of Korea.

Published: October 2020

Despite their extraordinary mechanosensitivities, most channel-like crack-based strain sensors are limited by their poor levels of stretchability and linearity. This work presents a simple yet efficient way of modulating the cracking structure of thin metal films on elastomers to facilitate the development of high-performance wearable strain sensors. A net-shaped crack structure based on a thin platinum (Pt) film can be produced by coating an elastomer surface with M13 bacteriophages (phages) and consequently engineering the surface strain upon stretching. This process produces a Pt-on-phage (PoP) strain sensor that simultaneously exhibits high levels of stretchability (24%), sensitivity (maximum gauge factor ≈ 845.6 for 20-24%), and linearity ( ≈ 0.988 up to 20%). In addition, the sensor performance can be further modulated by either changing the phage coating volume or adding a silver nanowire coating to the PoP sensor film. The balanced strain-sensing performance, combined with fast response times and high levels of mechanical flexibility and operational stability, enables the devices to detect a wide range of human motions in real time after being attached to various body parts. Furthermore, PoP-based strain sensors can be usefully extended to detect more complex multidimensional strains through further strain engineering on a cross-patterned PoP film.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.0c13307DOI Listing

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