Outdoor Worker Stress Monitoring Electronics with Nanofabric Radiative Cooler‐Based Thermal Management

Author:

Kim Hojoong12,Yoo Young Jin3,Yun Joo Ho3,Heo Se‐Yeon3,Song Young Min345,Yeo Woon‐Hong1267ORCID

Affiliation:

1. George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering College of Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta GA 30332 USA

2. IEN Center for Human‐Centric Interfaces and Engineering Institute for Electronics and Nanotechnology Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta GA 30332 USA

3. School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology Gwangju 61005 Republic of Korea

4. Anti‐Viral Research Center Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology Gwangju 61005 Republic of Korea

5. AI Graduate School Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology Gwangju 61005 Republic of Korea

6. Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta GA 30332 USA

7. Parker H. Petit Institute for Bioengineering and Biosciences Institute for Materials Neural Engineering Center Institute for Robotics and Intelligent Machines Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta GA 30332 USA

Abstract

AbstractSevere stress endangers outdoor workers who are in an exceedingly hot workplace. Although recent studies quantify stress levels on the human skin, they still rely on rigid, bulky sensor modules, causing data loss from motion artifacts and limited field‐deployability for continuous health monitoring. Moreover, no prior work shows a wearable device that can endure heat exposure while showing continuous monitoring of a subject's stress under realistic working environments. Herein, a soft, field‐deployable, wearable bioelectronic system is introduced for detecting outdoor workers' stress levels with negligible motion artifacts and controllable thermal management. A nanofabric radiative cooler (NFRC) and miniaturized sensors with a nanomembrane soft electronic platform are integrated to measure stable electrodermal activities and temperature in hot outdoor conditions. The NFRC exhibits outstanding cooling performance in sub‐ambient air with high solar reflectivity and high thermal emissivity. The integrated wearable device with all embedded electronic components and the NFRC shows a lower temperature (41.1%) in sub‐ambient air than the NFRC‐less device while capturing improved operation time (18.2%). In vivo human study of the bioelectronics with agricultural activities demonstrates the device's capability for portable, continuous, real‐time health monitoring of outdoor workers with field deployability.

Funder

National Science Foundation

National Research Foundation of Korea

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science,Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials

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