JOURNAL ARTICLE

High Sensitivity Flexible Electronic Skin Based on Graphene Film

Xiaozhou LüJiayi YangQi LiangWeimin BaoLiang ZhaoRenjie Chen

Year: 2019 Journal:   Sensors Vol: 19 (4)Pages: 794-794   Publisher: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

Abstract

Electronic skin with high sensitivity, rapid response, and long-term stability has great value in robotics, biomedicine, and in other fields. However, electronic skin still has challenges in terms of sensitivity and response time. In order to solve this problem, flexible electronic skin with high sensitivity and the fast response was proposed, based on piezoresistive graphene films. The electronic skin was a pressure sensor array, composed of a 4 × 4 tactile sensing unit. Each sensing unit contained three layers: The underlying substrate (polyimide substrate), the middle layer (graphene/polyethylene terephthalate film), and the upper substrate bump (polydimethylsiloxane). The results of the measurement and analysis experiments, designed in this paper, indicated that the flexible electronic skin achieved a positive resistance characteristic in the range of 0 kPa–600 kPa, a sensitivity of 10.80 Ω /kPa in the range of 0 kPa–4 kPa, a loading response time of 10 ms, and a spatial resolution of 5 mm. In addition, the electronic skin realized shape detection on a regular-shaped object, based on the change in the resistance value of each unit. The high sensitivity flexible electronic skin designed in this paper has important application prospects in medical diagnosis, artificial intelligence, and other fields.

Keywords:
Electronic skin Graphene Materials science Polydimethylsiloxane Substrate (aquarium) Sensitivity (control systems) Piezoresistive effect Polyethylene terephthalate Optoelectronics Response time Flexible electronics Nanotechnology Layer (electronics) Composite material Computer science Electronic engineering Engineering

Metrics

24
Cited By
1.51
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
23
Refs
0.79
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Advanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Tactile and Sensory Interactions
Life Sciences →  Neuroscience →  Cognitive Neuroscience
Conducting polymers and applications
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Polymers and Plastics

Related Documents

© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.