MRS Meetings and Events

 

SF02.09.06 2022 MRS Fall Meeting

Soft, Pressure-Tolerant, Flexible Electronic Sensors for Sensing Under Harsh Environments

When and Where

Nov 30, 2022
9:45am - 10:00am

Sheraton, 3rd Floor, Commonwealth

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Xueju Wang1,Yi Li1

University of Connecticut1

Abstract

Xueju Wang1,Yi Li1

University of Connecticut1
Energy-efficient, miniaturized electronic ocean sensors for monitoring and recording various environmental parameters remain a challenge because conventional ocean sensors require high-pressure chambers and seals to survive the large hydrostatic pressure and hash ocean environment, which usually entail a high-power supply and large size of the sensor system. In this talk, I will introduce soft, pressure-tolerant, flexible electronic sensors that can operate under large hydrostatic pressure and salinity environments, thereby eliminating the need for pressure chambers and reducing the power consumption and sensor size. By using resistive temperature and conductivity (salinity) sensors as an example for demonstration, the soft sensors are made of lithographically patterned metal thin films (100 nm) encapsulated with soft oil-infused elastomers and tested in a customized pressure vessel with well-controlled pressure and temperature conditions. The resistance of the temperature and pressure sensors increases linearly with a temperature range of 5 °C-38 °C and salinity levels of 30-40 Practical Salinity Unit (PSU), respectively, relevant for this application. Pressure (up to 15 MPa) has shown a negligible effect on the performance of the temperature and salinity sensors, demonstrating their large pressure-tolerance capability. In addition, both temperature and salinity sensors have exhibited excellent cyclic loading behaviors with negligible hysteresis. Encapsulated with our developed soft oil-infused rough polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), the sensor has shown excellent performance under 35 PSU salinity water environment for more than 7 months. The soft, pressure-tolerant, and non-invasive electronic sensors reported here are suitable for integration with many platforms including animal tags, profiling floats, diving equipment, and physiological monitoring.

Symposium Organizers

Ke Han, Florida State Univ
Alexander Goncharov, Carnegie Instution of Washington
Florence Lecouturier-Dupouy, CNRS-LNCMI
Wenge Yang, Center for High Pressure Science & Technology Advanced Research

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature