Easy-to-morph printable conductive Marangoni-driven 3D microdome geometries for fingertip-curved e-skin array with an ultragentle linear touchopen access
- Authors
- Jeon, Seung Hwan; Min, Hyeongho; Hwang, Gui Won; Son, Jihun; Kim, Han Joo; Kim, Da Wan; Lee, Yeon Soo; Park, Chang Hyun; Lee, Cheonyang; Choi, Hyoung-Min; Jang, Jinseok; Bok, Bo-Gyu; Yang, Tae-Heon; Kim, Min-Seok; Pang, Changhyun
- Issue Date
- 6-Mar-2025
- Publisher
- WILEY
- Keywords
- e-skin; Marangoni flow; nanocomposite; printed electronics
- Citation
- INFOMAT
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- INFOMAT
- URI
- https://scholarx.skku.edu/handle/2021.sw.skku/121188
- DOI
- 10.1002/inf2.70001
- ISSN
- 2567-3165
2567-3165
- Abstract
- Continuously printable electronics have the significant advantage of being efficient for fabricating conductive polymer composites; however, the precise tailoring of the 3D hierarchical morphology of conductive nanocomposites in a simple dripping step remains challenging. Here, we introduce a one-step direct printing technique to construct diverse microdome morphologies influenced by the interfacial Marangoni effect and nanoparticle interactions. Using a jet dispenser for continuous processing, we effectively fabricated a soft epidermis-like e-skin containing 64 densely arrayed pressure sensing pixels with a hierarchical dome array for enhanced linearity and ultrasensitivity. The e-skin has 36 temperature-sensing pixels in the outer layer, with a shield-shaped dome that is insensitive to pressure stimuli. Our prosthetic finger inserted with the printed sensor arrays was capable of ultragentle detection and manipulation, such as stably holding a fragile biscuit, using a soft dropper to elaborately produce water droplets and harvesting soft fruits; these activities are challenging for existing high-sensitivity tactile sensors. image
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- Appears in
Collections - SKKU Advanced Institute of Nano Technology > ETC > 1. Journal Articles
- Engineering > Chemical Engineering > 1. Journal Articles

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