Porous Core-Shell Yarn in Wearable Electrochemical Sensors for Real-Time Sweat Monitoring.

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces

Guangdong-Hong Kong Joint Laboratory for New Textile Materials, School of Textile Science and Engineering, Wuyi University, Jiangmen 529020, China.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Wearable sweat sensors are important for noninvasive health monitoring, but creating a highly sensitive and stable sensor is challenging.
  • - A new method using wet-spinning and acid-etching has been developed to create a porous core-shell yarn sensor, enhancing sensitivity to measure potassium and pH levels in sweat.
  • - These sensors show excellent long-term stability, are resistant to bending, and can be produced quickly, making them promising for real-time health monitoring and commercialization in health detection technology.

Article Abstract

Wearable sweat sensors have garnered substantial attention owing to their actual significance in the noninvasive and real-time monitoring of health conditions. However, it remains significantly challenging to efficiently construct a high-sensitivity sweat sensor with stable long-term sensing capability. Herein, we report an effective methodology based on wet-spinning/acid-etching technology to construct a porous core-shell yarn-based wearable electrochemical sensor. This strategy increases the inductive surface area of the ion concentration and facilitates signal transmission. As a result, the sensor demonstrates high sensitivity for monitoring K and pH in sweat (54.89 mV/dec for K and 40.2 mV/pH for pH). Furthermore, the sensors exhibit outstanding sensing stability, good long-term stability (>16 h), and satisfactory bending resistance (>1000 cycles). More importantly, the sensing yarns could be prepared at speeds of up to 500 m/h with a continuous preparation strategy, which enabled mass fabrication of the electrochemical sensor. Electrochemical sensors could serve as sweat-sensing systems for real-time health monitoring and hold great potential for the commercialization of health-detection technology.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.4c15353DOI Listing

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