Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Hypersensitive meta-crack strain sensor for real-time biomedical monitoring.
- Year:
- 2024
- Authors:
- Lee JH et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Materials Science and Engineering · South Korea
Abstract
Real-time monitoring of infinitesimal deformations on complex morphologies is essential for precision biomechanical engineering. While flexible strain sensors facilitate real-time monitoring with shape-adaptive properties, their sensitivity is generally lower than spectroscopic imaging methods. Crack-based strain sensors achieve enhanced sensitivity with gauge factors (GFs) exceeding 30,000; however, such GFs are only attainable at large strains exceeding several percent and decline below 10 for strains under 10<sup>-3</sup>, rendering them inadequate for minute deformations. Here, we introduce hypersensitive and flexible "meta-crack" sensors detecting infinitesimal strains through previously undiscovered crack-opening mechanisms. These sensors achieve remarkable GFs surpassing 1000 at strains of 10<sup>-4</sup> on substrates with a Poisson's ratio of -0.9. The crack orientation-independent gap-widening behavior elucidates the origin of hypersensitivity, corroborated by simplified models and finite element analysis. Additionally, parallel mechanical circuits of meta-cracks effectively address the trade-off between resolution and maximum sensing threshold. In vivo real-time monitoring of cerebrovascular dynamics with a strain resolution of 10<sup>-5</sup> underscores the hypersensitivity and conformal adaptability of sensors.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/39705343