Friday, 22 August 2014

Irish Researchers Create Wearable Sensors Using Rubber Bands



Ordinary rubber bands could be transformed into wearable sensors for monitoring blood pressure, joint movement and blood glucose, as a result of a discovery by researchers at the AMBER materials science centre and Trinity College, Dublin.
The method involves adding graphene to the rubber bands, the first time this has ever been successfully achieved anywhere in the world.
Dubbed a wonder material, graphene is made from a single flat layer of carbon atoms.
It is super strong, flexible and conductive, and scientists believe it will in future be used to make all sorts of products, from flexible mobile phones to lighter aeroplanes.
But scientists at the AMBER materials science centre and the School of Physics at Trinity College Dublin have found another use.
In a paper published in the journal ACS Nano, they describe how adding graphene to shop-bought rubber bands, can transform them into wearable sensors.
The world first technique makes the rubber conduct electricity, without degrading its mechanical properties.
As the stretching of the bands strongly effects the flow of electrical current, the bands can sense tiny movements, like a pulse when attached to clothing for example.
The scientists say the discovery will lead to multiple uses in areas like healthcare, the automotive industry and robotics
The paper, Sensitive, High Strain, High-rate, bodily motion Sensors based on Graphene-Rubber Composites, is available here.

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