JOURNAL ARTICLE

Human Skin-Inspired Electrospun Patterned Robust Strain-Insensitive Pressure Sensors and Wearable Flexible Light-Emitting Diodes

Abstract

Wearable skin-inspired electronic skins present remarkable outgrowth in recent years because their promising comfort device integration, lightweight, and mechanically robust durable characteristics led to significant progresses in wearable sensors and optoelectronics. Wearable electronic devices demand real-time applicability and factors such as complex fabrication steps, manufacturing cost, and reliable and durable performances, severely limiting the utilization. Herein, we nominate a scalable solution-processable electrospun patterned candidate capable of forming ultralong mechanically robust nano-microdimensional fibers with higher uniformity. Nanofibrous patterned substrates present surface energy and silver nanoparticle crystallization shifts, contributing to strain-sensitive and -insensitive conductive electrodes (10 000 cycles of 50% strain). Synergistic robust stress releasing and durable electromechanical behavior engenders stretchable durable health sensors, strain-insensitive pressure sensors (sensitivity of ∼83 kPa-1 and 5000 durable cycles), robust alternating current electroluminescent displays, and flexible organic light-emitting diodes (20% improved luminescence and 300 flex endurance of 2 mm bend radius).

Keywords:
Materials science Electronic skin Optoelectronics Pressure sensor Wearable computer Stretchable electronics Fabrication Wearable technology Nanotechnology Electroluminescence Bend radius Composite material Electronics Computer science Electrical engineering Mechanical engineering

Metrics

55
Cited By
5.99
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
64
Refs
0.96
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
Interactive and Immersive Displays
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Human-Computer Interaction
Nanomaterials and Printing Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.