TY - JOUR
T1 - Highly Stretchable Thermoelectric Fiber with Embedded Copper(I) Iodide Nanoparticles for a Multimodal Temperature, Strain, and Pressure Sensor in Wearable Electronics
AU - Yoon, Kukro
AU - Lee, Sanghyeon
AU - Kwon, Chaebeen
AU - Won, Chihyeong
AU - Cho, Sungjoon
AU - Lee, Seungmin
AU - Lee, Minkyu
AU - Lee, Jinhan
AU - Lee, Hyeokjun
AU - Jang, Kyung In
AU - Kim, Byeonggwan
AU - Lee, Taeyoon
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Advanced Functional Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2025/1/2
Y1 - 2025/1/2
N2 - Thermoelectric (TE) fibers have excellent potential for multimodal sensor, which can detect mechanical and thermal stimuli, used in advanced wearable electronics for personalized healthcare system. However, previously reported TE fibers have limitations for use in wearable multimodal sensors due to the following reasons: 1) TE fibers composed of carbon or organic materials have low TE performance to detect thermal variations effectively; 2) TE fibers composed of rigid inorganic materials are not stretchable, limiting their ability to detect mechanical deformation. Herein, the first stretchable TE fiber-based multimodal sensor is developed using copper(I) iodide (CuI), an inorganic TE material, through a novel fabrication method. The dense CuI nanoparticle networks embedded in the fiber allow the sensor to achieve excellent stretchability (maximum tensile strain of ≈835%) and superior TE performance (Seebeck coefficient of ≈203.6 µV K−1) simultaneously. The sensor exhibits remarkable performances in strain sensing (gauge factor of ≈3.89 with tensile strain range of ≈200%) and pressure sensing (pressure resolution of ≈250 Pa with pressure range of ≈84 kPa). Additionally, the sensor enables independent and simultaneous temperature change, tensile strain, and pressure sensing by measuring distinct parameters. It is seamlessly integrated into a smart glove, demonstrating its practical application in wearable technology.
AB - Thermoelectric (TE) fibers have excellent potential for multimodal sensor, which can detect mechanical and thermal stimuli, used in advanced wearable electronics for personalized healthcare system. However, previously reported TE fibers have limitations for use in wearable multimodal sensors due to the following reasons: 1) TE fibers composed of carbon or organic materials have low TE performance to detect thermal variations effectively; 2) TE fibers composed of rigid inorganic materials are not stretchable, limiting their ability to detect mechanical deformation. Herein, the first stretchable TE fiber-based multimodal sensor is developed using copper(I) iodide (CuI), an inorganic TE material, through a novel fabrication method. The dense CuI nanoparticle networks embedded in the fiber allow the sensor to achieve excellent stretchability (maximum tensile strain of ≈835%) and superior TE performance (Seebeck coefficient of ≈203.6 µV K−1) simultaneously. The sensor exhibits remarkable performances in strain sensing (gauge factor of ≈3.89 with tensile strain range of ≈200%) and pressure sensing (pressure resolution of ≈250 Pa with pressure range of ≈84 kPa). Additionally, the sensor enables independent and simultaneous temperature change, tensile strain, and pressure sensing by measuring distinct parameters. It is seamlessly integrated into a smart glove, demonstrating its practical application in wearable technology.
KW - copper(I) iodide
KW - inorganic thermoelectric materials
KW - multimodal sensors
KW - stretchable electronics
KW - thermoelectric fibers
KW - wearable electronics
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U2 - 10.1002/adfm.202407759
DO - 10.1002/adfm.202407759
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85197775963
SN - 1616-301X
VL - 35
JO - Advanced Functional Materials
JF - Advanced Functional Materials
IS - 1
M1 - 2407759
ER -