Home → News → Engineers Fabricate a Chip-Free, Wireless Electronic... → Full Text

Engineers Fabricate a Chip-Free, Wireless Electronic 'Skin'

By MIT News

August 18, 2022

[article image]


MIT engineers have devised a new kind of wearable sensor that communicates wirelessly without requiring onboard chips or batteries. Their design, detailed in the journal Science, opens a path toward chip-free wireless sensors.

The team devised a semiconductor film that can be used for chip-less, flexible e-skins. The material is flexible and breathable, thus providing better comfort for wearers of sensors. The devices convert electrical energy into surface acoustic waves using a piezoelectric resonator. The researchers found they could use the material simultaneously for both sensing and wireless communication.

"Our device could make a system very light without having any chips that are power-hungry," says Professor Jeehwan Kim. "You could put it on your body like a bandage, and paired with a wireless reader on your cellphone, you could wirelessly monitor your pulse, sweat, and other biological signals."

From MIT News
View Full Article

0 Comments

No entries found