JOURNAL ARTICLE

Bioinspired Hierarchical Microstructures for Multifunctional Flexible Sensors in Wearable Health Monitoring Systems

Abstract

Bioinspired microstructures provide an effective strategy for improving the sensitivity, stability, and comfort of flexible wearable sensors; however, many existing systems remain limited by qualitative mechanism descriptions and insufficiently parameterized fabrication protocols. In this work, a multifunctional and self-powered flexible sensor is presented, incorporating fingerprint-inspired hierarchical ridges for mechanical signal amplification, lotus-leaf-like porous architectures for enhanced vapor transmission and liquid repellence, and a hybrid piezoelectric–triboelectric module for energy harvesting. By integrating finite element analysis (FEA) with surface-energy modeling, a quantitative structure–performance relationship is established, demonstrating how ridge pitch, micro-papillae roughness, and hierarchical geometry modulate local stress concentration and wetting behavior. A fully specified fabrication workflow is provided, including defined MXene loading ratios, PVDF-TrFE poling parameters, and enzyme-immobilization conditions to ensure reproducibility. Statistical evaluation (n = 5, power = 0.8; one-way ANOVA, p < 0.05) confirms consistent performance across batches. The device exhibits high pressure sensitivity (158.1 kPa⁻¹), rapid response (45 ms), stable multimodal performance over 10,000 mechanical cycles, and selective glucose detection with minimal biochemical interference. These findings establish a mechanism-supported, reproducibility-validated platform that advances bioinspired wearable sensing and provides a foundation for long-term health-monitoring applications.

Keywords:
Wearable computer Fabrication Wearable technology Workflow Sensitivity (control systems) Pressure sensor Finite element method SIGNAL (programming language)

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Topics

Advanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Advanced Materials and Mechanics
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanical Engineering
MXene and MAX Phase Materials
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
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