Wide-range soft anisotropic thermistor with a direct wireless radio frequency interface
Temperature sensors are one of the most fundamental sensors and are found in industrial, environmental, and biomedical applications. The traditional approach of reading the resistive response of Positive Temperature Coefficient thermistors at DC hindered their adoption as wide-range temperature sensors. Here, we present a large-area thermistor, based on a flexible and stretchable short carbon fibre incorporated Polydimethylsiloxane composite, enabled by a radio frequency sensing interface. The radio frequency readout overcomes the decades-old sensing range limit of thermistors. The composite exhibits a resistance sensitivity over 1000 °C−1, while maintaining stability against bending (20,000 cycles) and stretching (1000 cycles). Leveraging its large-area processing, the anisotropic composite is used as a substrate for sub-6 GHz radio frequency components, where the thermistor-based microwave resonators achieve a wide temperature sensing range (30 to 205 °C) compared to reported flexible temperature sensors, and high sensitivity (3.2 MHz/°C) compared to radio frequency temperature sensors. Wireless sensing is demonstrated using a microstrip patch antenna based on a thermistor substrate, and a battery-less radio frequency identification tag. This radio frequency-based sensor readout technique could enable functional materials to be directly integrated in wireless sensing applications.
Funding
Wearable and Autonomous Computing for Future Smart Cities: A Platform Grant
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Find out more...Anisotropic Microwave/Terahertz Metamaterials for Satellite Applications (ANISAT)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Find out more...UK Royal Society under the Research Grant “STEMS” RGS\R1\231028
UK Royal Academy of Engineering and the Office of the Chief Science Adviser for National Security under the UK Intelligence Community Research Fellowship programme
Royal Academy of Engineering under the Chairs in Emerging Technologies scheme
History
School
- Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering
Published in
Nature CommunicationsVolume
15Publisher
Springer NatureVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
Rights holder
© The Author(s)Publisher statement
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2024-01-03Publication date
2024-01-11Copyright date
2024eISSN
2041-1723Publisher version
Language
- en