Abstract

Abstract Recent progress in electronic skin or e‐skin research is broadly reviewed, focusing on technologies needed in three main applications: skin‐attachable electronics, robotics, and prosthetics. First, since e‐skin will be exposed to prolonged stresses of various kinds and needs to be conformally adhered to irregularly shaped surfaces, materials with intrinsic stretchability and self‐healing properties are of great importance. Second, tactile sensing capability such as the detection of pressure, strain, slip, force vector, and temperature are important for health monitoring in skin attachable devices, and to enable object manipulation and detection of surrounding environment for robotics and prosthetics. For skin attachable devices, chemical and electrophysiological sensing and wireless signal communication are of high significance to fully gauge the state of health of users and to ensure user comfort. For robotics and prosthetics, large‐area integration on 3D surfaces in a facile and scalable manner is critical. Furthermore, new signal processing strategies using neuromorphic devices are needed to efficiently process tactile information in a parallel and low power manner. For prosthetics, neural interfacing electrodes are of high importance. These topics are discussed, focusing on progress, current challenges, and future prospects.

Keywords

Electronic skinInterfacingRoboticsElectronicsNeuromorphic engineeringArtificial intelligenceComputer scienceMaterials scienceBiomedical engineeringNanotechnologyRobotElectrical engineeringComputer hardwareEngineeringArtificial neural network

MeSH Terms

Biocompatible MaterialsBiosensing TechniquesHumansMechanical PhenomenaMonitoringPhysiologicPolymersProstheses and ImplantsRoboticsSemiconductorsSkinSurface PropertiesTouchWearable Electronic DevicesWireless TechnologyWound Healing

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
2019
Type
review
Volume
31
Issue
48
Pages
e1904765-e1904765
Citations
1540
Access
Closed

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1540
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9
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Cite This

Jun Chang Yang, Jaewan Mun, Se Young Kwon et al. (2019). Electronic Skin: Recent Progress and Future Prospects for Skin‐Attachable Devices for Health Monitoring, Robotics, and Prosthetics. Advanced Materials , 31 (48) , e1904765-e1904765. https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.201904765

Identifiers

DOI
10.1002/adma.201904765
PMID
31538370

Data Quality

Data completeness: 90%