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Fully integrated wearable sensor arrays for multiplexed in situ perspiration analysis

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TLDR
This work bridges the technological gap between signal transduction, conditioning, processing and wireless transmission in wearable biosensors by merging plastic-based sensors that interface with the skin with silicon integrated circuits consolidated on a flexible circuit board for complex signal processing.
Abstract
Wearable sensor technologies are essential to the realization of personalized medicine through continuously monitoring an individual's state of health. Sampling human sweat, which is rich in physiological information, could enable non-invasive monitoring. Previously reported sweat-based and other non-invasive biosensors either can only monitor a single analyte at a time or lack on-site signal processing circuitry and sensor calibration mechanisms for accurate analysis of the physiological state. Given the complexity of sweat secretion, simultaneous and multiplexed screening of target biomarkers is critical and requires full system integration to ensure the accuracy of measurements. Here we present a mechanically flexible and fully integrated (that is, no external analysis is needed) sensor array for multiplexed in situ perspiration analysis, which simultaneously and selectively measures sweat metabolites (such as glucose and lactate) and electrolytes (such as sodium and potassium ions), as well as the skin temperature (to calibrate the response of the sensors). Our work bridges the technological gap between signal transduction, conditioning (amplification and filtering), processing and wireless transmission in wearable biosensors by merging plastic-based sensors that interface with the skin with silicon integrated circuits consolidated on a flexible circuit board for complex signal processing. This application could not have been realized using either of these technologies alone owing to their respective inherent limitations. The wearable system is used to measure the detailed sweat profile of human subjects engaged in prolonged indoor and outdoor physical activities, and to make a real-time assessment of the physiological state of the subjects. This platform enables a wide range of personalized diagnostic and physiological monitoring applications.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Complete validation of a continuous and blood-correlated sweat biosensing device with integrated sweat stimulation

TL;DR: This work validates that sweat biosensing can provide continuous and blood-correlated data in an integrated wearable device and represents a significant advance that builds upon a continuum of previous work.
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Achievements and Challenges for Real-Time Sensing of Analytes in Sweat within Wearable Platforms.

TL;DR: While substantial progress has been made toward wearable molecular biosensors, substantial barriers remain and need to be solved to enable deployment of minimally invasive, wearable biomarker monitoring devices that can accurately report on psychophysiological status.
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Bio-Multifunctional Smart Wearable Sensors for Medical Devices

TL;DR: A comprehensive review of the latest progress concerning smart wearable sensors is presented with a focus on bio-multifunctional (biocompatible, biodegradable, and self-healing) device designs as mentioned in this paper.
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Ultrathin Conformable Organic Artificial Synapse for Wearable Intelligent Device Applications.

TL;DR: The first ultrathin conformable organic artificial synapse that features freestanding ferroelectric organic neuromorphic transistors (FONTs), which can stand alone without a substrate or an encapsulation layer is demonstrated.
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A thin film polyethylene terephthalate (PET) electrochemical sensor for detection of glucose in sweat.

TL;DR: The PGE-glucose sensor had a good selectivity and was not interfered by lactic acid, urea, acetaminophen, uric acid, dopamine and ascorbic acid and exhibited good reproducibility and long-term stability over four weeks.
References
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Skin-like pressure and strain sensors based on transparent elastic films of carbon nanotubes

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A review of wearable sensors and systems with application in rehabilitation.

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Piezoelectricity of single-atomic-layer MoS2 for energy conversion and piezotronics.

TL;DR: It is shown that cyclic stretching and releasing of thin MoS2 flakes with an odd number of atomic layers produces oscillating piezoelectric voltage and current outputs, whereas no output is observed for flakes with even number of layers, which may enable the development of applications in powering nanodevices, adaptive bioprobes and tunable/stretchable electronics/optoelectronics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrochemical Biosensors - Sensor Principles and Architectures

TL;DR: In this article, the most common traditional traditional techniques, such as cyclic voltammetry, chronoamperometry, chronopotentiometry, impedance spectroscopy, and various field-effect transistor based methods are presented along with selected promising novel approaches, including nanowire or magnetic nanoparticle-based biosensing.
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