Non-powered Smart Glove with Stretchable Pressure Sensor for Fine Finger Control
- admin
- 2023-05-15
- 2507
-Professor Park Jae-young's Team Develops a Non-powered Stretchable Pressure Sensor and Smart Glove Capable of Monitoring and Controlling Fine Movements of the Fingers-
-Expected to Be Used in Various Industries Such as Intelligent
Robots, AR/VR, Sign Language Interpretation, and Various Human-machine
Interfaces-
-Published in the Prestigious International Academic Journal
Nano Energy by Elsevier (IF:19.069)-
Professor Jaeyoung Park's research team
(Department of Electronic Engineering) has succeeded in developing a toroidal
pressure sensor based on frictional electricity that can continuously monitor
the fine movements of fingers in real time even without power. The research
team created a high-performance stretchable pressure sensor that can precisely
measure the movements of fine fingers by using a nano-composite material made
of fine pyramid structure arrays and Mxene/Ecoflex, which has elasticity, as
the negative charge layer of the frictional electricity nanogenerator and the
finger skin as the positive charge layer. The produced sensor has excellent
sensing characteristics and mechanical robustness, so it can be applied to
various industrial fields such as hand gesture detection and control systems,
sign language interpretation systems, intelligent robots using human-machine
interfaces, drones, games, VR/AR, etc.
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Professor Jaeyoung Park (left) and PhD candidate Sebouh Jang (right)>
This study was conducted with funding from
the Korean Research Foundation's Mid-Career Researcher Support Program
(NRF-2020R1A2C2012820) and the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy's
Industrial Technology Innovation Program (RS-2022-00154983, Development of
Self-Powered Sensor Platform for Low-Power Sensors and Actuators). The research
results were published in Nano Energy (IF: 19.069), a leading journal in energy
materials and devices, by Elsevier.
Web link:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nanoen.2022.108110
<Development of a friction-electricity-based, power-free, stretchable toroidal pressure sensor using 3D printing technology and a flexible Mxene/Ecoflex nanocomposite material, wearable glove, performance, and application examples>