3D Printing of Capacitive Pressure Sensors with Tuned Wide Detection Range and High Sensitivity Inspired by Bio‐Inspired Kapok Structures

Author:

Jin Qingxin12,Wang Chengyun34,Wu Han12,Luo Xin12,Li Jiaqi12,Ma Guangmeng12,Li Yu12,Luo Chunyi12,Guo Fawei12,Long Yu12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Laser Intelligent Manufacturing and Precision Processing School of Mechanical Engineering Guangxi University Nanning Guangxi 530004 China

2. State Key Laboratory of Featured Metal Materials and Life‐cycle Safety for Composite Structures Guangxi University Nanning Guangxi 530004 China

3. College of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering Central South University Changsha Hunan 410083 China

4. State Key Laboratory of Precision Manufacturing for Extreme Service Performance Central South University Changsha Hunan 410083 China

Abstract

AbstractFlexible pressure sensors have drawn considerable attention for their potential applications as electronic skins with both sensitivity and pressure response range. Although the introduction of surface microstructures effectively enhances sensitivity, the confined volume of their compressible structures results in a limited pressure response range. To address this issue, a biomimetic kapok structure is proposed and implemented for constructing the dielectric layer of flexible capacitive pressure sensors employing 3D printing technology. The structure is designed with easily deformable concave and rotational structures, enabling continuous deformation under pressure. This design results in a significant expansion of the pressure response range and improvement in sensitivity. Further, the study purposively analyses crucial parameters of the devised structure that affect its compressibility and stability. These include the concave angle θ, height ratio d1/d2, rotation angle α, and width k. As a result, the ultimate pressure sensors demonstrate remarkable features such as high sensitivity (≈2.38 kPa−1 in the range of 0–10 kPa), broad detection range (734 kPa), fast response time (23 ms), and outstanding pressure resolution (0.4% at 500 kPa). This study confirms the viability of bionic structures for flexible sensors, and their potential to expand the scope of wearable electronic devices.

Funder

Natural Science Foundation of Guangxi Province

Publisher

Wiley

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