Litcius/Paper detail

Waterproof and Flexible Aquatic Tactile Sensor with Interlocked Ripple Structures for Broad Range Force Sensing

Zhongtan Zhang, Feihe Xiang, Deqing Mei, Yancheng Wang

2023Advanced Materials Technologies23 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Underwater perception of a broad range of force holds great importance in aquatic explorative activities, while flexible tactile sensors face technical challenges to realize. This paper presents a novel flexible aquatic tactile sensor based on waterproof graphene (GR)/carbon nanotube (CNT)/Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) composites. The prepared GR/CNT/PDMS composites possess excellent hydrophobic and electromechanical properties with a water contact angle over 134° and an ultrahigh gauge factor of 2296, making them an ideal piezoresistive sensing material for underwater broad‐range force sensing. The proposed tactile sensor has 3 × 3 sensing units and uses dual interlocked water‐ripple structures to improve its sensitivity and force detection range. The fabricated tactile sensor is characterized by two distinct sensitivities: a high sensitivity of 0.0338 kPa −1 at 0.062–150 kPa and a low sensitivity of 0.00357 kPa −1 at 150–450 kPa. Further, the sensor exhibited excellent resistance response, fast dynamic recovery, and both mechanical and electrical stability in aquatic environments. Then, the aquatic tactile sensor is worn on the palm of the human hand to detect the distribution and variation of contact forces when grasping objects with different shapes and hardness, demonstrating the potential underwater applications of the developed aquatic tactile sensor for broad‐range force sensing.

Topics & Concepts

Piezoresistive effectTactile sensorMaterials scienceUnderwaterPolydimethylsiloxaneSensitivity (control systems)Contact forceGauge factorRippleComputer scienceNanotechnologyComposite materialElectrical engineeringFabricationRobotArtificial intelligenceElectronic engineeringEngineeringPhysicsGeologyMedicineOceanographyPathologyAlternative medicineVoltageQuantum mechanicsAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting MaterialsTactile and Sensory InteractionsMuscle activation and electromyography studies