Litcius/Paper detail

Wearable Printed Temperature Sensors: Short Review on Latest Advances for Biomedical Applications

Sukhan Lee, Shawkat Ali, Arshad Khan, Amine Bermak

2021IEEE Reviews in Biomedical Engineering41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The rapid growth in wearable biosensing devices is driven by the strong desire to monitor the human health data and to predict the symptoms of chronic diseases at an early stage. Different sensors are developed for continuous monitoring of various biomarkers through wearable and implantable sensing patches. Temperature sensor has proved to be an important physiological parameter amongst the various wearable biosensing patches. This paper highlights the recent progresses made in printing of functional nanomaterials for developing wearable temperature sensors on polymeric substrates. A special focus is given to the advanced functional nanomaterials as well as their deposition through printing technologies. The geometric resolutions, shape, physical and electrical characteristics as well as sensing properties using different materials are compared and summarized. Wearability is the main concern of these newly developed sensors, which is summarized by discussing representative examples. Finally, the challenges concerning the stability, repeatability, reliability, sensitivity, linearity, ageing, and large-scale manufacturing are discussed with future outlook of the wearable systems.

Topics & Concepts

Wearable computerWearable technologyComputer scienceNanotechnologyReliability (semiconductor)Materials scienceEmbedded systemPhysicsQuantum mechanicsPower (physics)Advanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting MaterialsGas Sensing Nanomaterials and SensorsConducting polymers and applications