Wearable electrochemical sensors have attracted tremendous attention and have been experiencing rapid growth in recent years. Sweat, one of the most suitable biological fluids for non-invasive monitoring, contains various chemical elements relating abundant information about human health conditions. In this work, a new type of non-invasive and highly stretchable potentiometric sweat sensor was developed based on all-solid-state ion-selective electrode (ISE) coupled with poly(dimethylsiloxane; PDMS) and polyurethane (PU). This highly stretchable composite of PDMS-PU allows the sensor to be robust, with the PDMS providing a flexible backbone and the PU enhancing the adhesion between the electrodes and the substrate. In addition, graphene–carbon nanotube (CNT) network 3D nanomaterials were introduced to modify the ion selective membrane (ISM) in order to increase the charge transfer activity of the ISEs, which also could minimize the formation of water layers on the electrode surface, as such nanomaterials are highly hydrophobic. As a result, the sensor demonstrated a wide detection range of NH4+ from 10−6 M to 10−1 M with high stability and sensitivity—showing a high sensitivity of 59.6 ± 1.5 mV/log [NH4+] and an LOD lower than 10−6 M. Under a strain of 40%, the sensor still showed a sensitivity of 42.7 ± 3.1 mV/log [NH4+]. The proposed highly stretchable and robust electrochemical sweat sensor provides a new choice for wearable-device-based personal daily healthcare management beyond hospital-centric healthcare monitoring.
We demonstrated a hybrid sensor of fiber Bragg grating (FBG) and Fabry-Perot interferometer (FPI) based on fiber-tip microcantilever for simultaneous measurement of temperature and humidity. The FPI was developed using femtosecond (fs) laser-induced two-photon polymerization to print the polymer microcantilever at the end of a single-mode fiber, achieving a humidity sensitivity of 0.348 nm/%RH (40% to 90%, when temperature = 25 °C ± 0.1 °C), and a temperature sensitivity of -0.356 nm/°C (25 to 70 °C, when RH% = 40% ± 1%). The FBG was line-by-line inscribed in the fiber core by fs laser micromachining, with a temperature sensitivity of 0.012 nm/ °C (25 to 70 °C, when RH% = 40% ± 1%). As the shift of FBG-peak on the reflection spectra is only sensitive to temperature rather than humidity, the ambient temperature can be directly measured by the FBG. The output of FBG can also be utilized as temperature compensation for FPI-based humidity measurement. Thus, the measured result of relative humidity can be decoupled from the total shift of FPI-dip, achieving the simultaneous measurement of humidity and temperature. Gaining the advantages of high sensitivity, compact size, easy packaging, and dual parameter measurement, this all-fiber sensing probe is anticipated to be applied as the key component for various applications involving the simultaneous measurement of temperature and humidity.
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