2014
DOI: 10.1088/0964-1726/23/5/053001
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Smart fabric sensors and e-textile technologies: a review

Abstract: This paper provides a review of recent developments in the rapidly changing and advancing field of smart fabric sensor and electronic textile technologies. It summarizes the basic principles and approaches employed when building fabric sensors as well as the most commonly used materials and techniques used in electronic textiles. This paper shows that sensing functionality can be created by intrinsic and extrinsic modifications to textile substrates depending on the level of integration into the fabric platfor… Show more

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Cited by 655 publications
(460 citation statements)
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References 176 publications
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“…5 There are many technologies that can allow one to get highly conductive textile materials (CTM). 2,6 Conductivity of fabrics can be enabled during manufacturing. In this case, conductive fibers and yarns are used.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…5 There are many technologies that can allow one to get highly conductive textile materials (CTM). 2,6 Conductivity of fabrics can be enabled during manufacturing. In this case, conductive fibers and yarns are used.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The smallest type of micro-patches are tattoos which could be directly printed on the skin sensors (as seen in Figure 5c) and could measure "skin hydration, temperature, and any electric signals from muscle and brain activity" [83]. They could also be ultrathin, stretchable and is not irritable to a user [84]. …”
Section: E-textilementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In [65], we find a review which summarizes the basic principles and approaches employed for having the fabric sensors. The most commonly used materials and techniques are also discussed.…”
Section: Biosignal Monitoringmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…"The current work demonstrates that fabric sensors can be tailored to measure force, pressure, chemicals, humidity and temperature variations". In [65], the polypyrrole, in polypyrrole-coated Lycra fibres, is mentioned for having strain fabric sensors. It is also used for the detection of chemicals and gases in chemo-resistors, that is, in sensors whose electric resistance is sensitive to the chemical environment.…”
Section: Biosignal Monitoringmentioning
confidence: 99%
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