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Flexible Hybrid Electronics: Direct Interfacing of Soft and Hard Electronics for Wearable Health Monitoring

  • Yasser Khan
  • , Mohit Garg
  • , Qiong Gui
  • , Mark Schadt
  • , Abhinav Gaikwad
  • , Donggeon Han
  • , Natasha A.D. Yamamoto
  • , Paul Hart
  • , Robert Welte
  • , William Wilson
  • , Steve Czarnecki
  • , Mark Poliks
  • , Zhanpeng Jin
  • , Kanad Ghose
  • , Frank Egitto
  • , James Turner
  • , Ana C. Arias
  • University of California at Berkeley
  • State University of New York Binghamton University
  • Inc.
  • ExSys Technology, Inc.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

281 Scopus citations

Abstract

The interfacing of soft and hard electronics is a key challenge for flexible hybrid electronics. Currently, a multisubstrate approach is employed, where soft and hard devices are fabricated or assembled on separate substrates, and bonded or interfaced using connectors; this hinders the flexibility of the device and is prone to interconnect issues. Here, a single substrate interfacing approach is reported, where soft devices, i.e., sensors, are directly printed on Kapton polyimide substrates that are widely used for fabricating flexible printed circuit boards (FPCBs). Utilizing a process flow compatible with the FPCB assembly process, a wearable sensor patch is fabricated composed of inkjet-printed gold electrocardiography (ECG) electrodes and a stencil-printed nickel oxide thermistor. The ECG electrodes provide 1 mVp–p ECG signal at 4.7 cm electrode spacing and the thermistor is highly sensitive at normal body temperatures, and demonstrates temperature coefficient, α ≈ –5.84% K–1 and material constant, β ≈ 4330 K. This sensor platform can be extended to a more sophisticated multisensor platform where sensors fabricated using solution processable functional inks can be interfaced to hard electronics for health and performance monitoring, as well as internet of things applications.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)8764-8775
Number of pages12
JournalAdvanced Functional Materials
Volume26
Issue number47
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 20 2016

Keywords

  • flexible electronics
  • inkjet printing
  • printed electrocardiography electrodes
  • printed thermistors
  • wearable sensor patches

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