JOURNAL ARTICLE

Highly Sensitive Flexible Iontronic Pressure Sensor for Fingertip Pulse Monitoring

Abstract

Abstract The pulse is a key biomedical signal containing various human physiological and pathological information highly related to cardiovascular diseases. Pulse signals are often collected from the radial artery based on Traditional Chinese Medicine, or by using flexible pressure sensors. However, the wrist wrapped with a flexible pressure sensor exhibits unstable signals under hand motion because of the concave surface of the wrist. By contrast, fingertips have a convex surface and therefore show great promises in stable and long‐term pulse monitoring. Despite the promising potential, the fingertip pulse signal is weak, calling for highly sensitive detecting devices. Here, a highly sensitive and flexible iontronic pressure sensor with a linear sensitivity of 13.5 kPa −1 , a swift response, and remarkable stability over 5000 loading/unloading cycles is developed. This sensor enables stable and high‐resolution detection of pulse waveform under both static condition and finger motion. Fingertip pulse waveforms from subjects of different genders, age, and health conditions are collected and analyzed, suggesting that fingertip pulse information is highly similar to that of the radial artery. This work justifies that fingertip is an ideal platform for pulse signals monitoring, which would be a competitive alternative to existing complex health monitoring systems.

Keywords:
Pulse (music) SIGNAL (programming language) Photoplethysmogram Biomedical engineering Pressure sensor Computer science Sensitivity (control systems) Waveform Acoustics Wrist Radial artery Materials science Computer vision Electronic engineering Medicine Engineering Artery Physics Surgery Telecommunications Mechanical engineering

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181
Cited By
9.58
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
39
Refs
0.99
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Citation History

Topics

Advanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Non-Invasive Vital Sign Monitoring
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
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Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
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