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Textile strain sensors: a review of the fabrication technologies, performance evaluation and applications

journal contribution
posted on 2019-02-01, 00:00 authored by Shayan Seyedin, P Zhang, Maryam NaebeMaryam Naebe, Alex QinAlex Qin, J Chen, Xungai Wang, Joselito RazalJoselito Razal
© 2019 The Royal Society of Chemistry. The recent surge in using wearable personalized devices has made it increasingly important to have flexible textile-based sensor alternatives that can be comfortably worn and can sense a wide range of body strains. Typically fabricated from rigid materials such as metals or semiconductors, conventional strain sensors can only withstand small strains and result in bulky, inflexible, and hard-to-wear devices. Textile strain sensors offer a new generation of devices that combine strain sensing functionality with wearability and high stretchability. In this review, we discuss recent exciting advances in the fabrication, performance enhancement, and applications of wearable textile strain sensors. We describe conventional and novel approaches to achieve textile strain sensors such as coating, conducting elastomeric fiber spinning, wrapping, coiling, coaxial fiber processing, and knitting. We also discuss how important performance parameters such as electrical conductivity, mechanical properties, sensitivity, sensing range, and stability are influenced by fabrication strategies to illustrate their effects on the sensing mechanism of textile sensors. We summarize the potential applications of textile sensors in structural health monitoring, wearable body movement measurements, data gloves, and entertainment. Finally, we present the challenges and opportunities that exist to date in order to provide meaningful guidelines and directions for future research.

History

Journal

Materials horizons

Volume

6

Issue

2

Pagination

219 - 249

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

Location

Cambridge, Eng.

ISSN

2051-6347

eISSN

2051-6355

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2019, The Royal Society of Chemistry