Affiliation:
1. Functional Polymers Research Laboratory Tosoh Corporation 1‐8 Kasumi Yokkaichi Mie 510‐8540 Japan
2. Research Center for Organic Electronics (ROEL) Yamagata University 4‐3‐16 Jonan Yonezawa Yamagata 992‐8510 Japan
Abstract
AbstractTemperature correction for sensors is a critical aspect of ensuring accurate measurements in wearable devices, because skin and sweat temperatures vary between 20 and 40 °C depending on individual and time. Here, this study reports on the temperature dependence and correction techniques of printed Na+, K+, and pH sensors toward wearable applications. The ion sensor array is fabricated using a cost‐effective printing method. To enable temperature correction, a printed thermistor of crosslinked poly(3,4‐ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS) is monolithically integrated with the ion sensor array on a flexible plastic substrate. Temperature dependence of the potential response of the printed ion sensors exhibits a linear behavior with a slope of 1–2 mV °C−1 in the physiological skin temperature range of 20–40 °C. Applying temperature correction to the ion sensors, the maximum relative errors are reduced from 60% to 7.8% for the Na+ sensors and from 76% to 14.6% for the K+ sensors, while the maximum absolute error is reduced from 0.88 to 0.19 for the pH sensors, indicating the critical importance of temperature correction as a technology for wearable printed ion sensors.