Nanoforce Touch Sensor Improves Wearable Devices.
Schematic illustration of a transparent flexible force touch sensor (upper image) and sensitivity enhancement by using stress concentration (lower image).
Researchers reported a high-performance and transparent nanoforce touch sensor by developing a thin flexible and transparent hierarchical nanocomposite (HNC) film.
The research team says their sensor simultaneously features all the necessary characters for industrial-grade application: high sensitivity, transparency, bending insensitivity and manufacturability.
Force touch sensors that recognize the location and pressure of external stimuli have received considerable attention for various applications such as wearable devices, flexible displays and humanoid robots.
For decades huge amounts of research and development have been devoted to improving pressure sensitivity to realize industrial-grade sensing devices.
However it remains a challenge to apply force touch sensors in flexible applications because sensing performance is subject to change and degraded by induced mechanical stress and deformation when the device is bent.
To overcome these issues the research team focused on the development of non-air gap sensors to break away from the conventional technology where force touch sensors need to have air-gaps between electrodes for high sensitivity and flexibility.
The proposed non air-gap force touch sensor is based on a transparent nanocomposite insulator containing metal nanoparticles which can maximize the capacitance change in dielectrics according to the pressure and a nanograting substrate which can increase transparency as well as sensitivity by concentrating pressure.
As a result the team succeeded in fabricating a highly sensitive transparent flexible force touch sensor that is mechanically stable against repetitive pressure.
Furthermore by placing the sensing electrodes on the same plane as the neutral plane the force touch sensor can operate even when bending to the radius of the ballpoint pen without changes in performance levels.
The proposed force touch has also satisfied commercial considerations in mass production such as large-area uniformity, production reproducibility and reliability according to temperature and long-term use.
Finally the research team applied the developed sensor to a pulse-monitoring capable healthcare wearable device and detected a real-time human pulse.
In addition the research team confirmed with Georgian Technical University HiDeep that a seven-inch large-area sensor can be integrated into a commercial smartphone.
The team of Professor X PhD student Y and Dr. Z from the School of Electrical Engineering carried out the study that was featured as a back.
PhD student Y who led this research says “We successfully developed an industrial-grade force touch sensor by using a simple structure and fabrication process. We expect it to be widely used in user touch interfaces and wearable devices”.