fig8

Self-powered wearable IoT sensors as human-machine interfaces

Figure 8. Applications of Human-machine interfacing. (A) Self-powered temperature and strain sensing, Reproduced with permission[33], Copyright 2022, Elsevier B.V.; (B) All-Fiber Electronic Skin, Reproduced with permission[206], Copyright 2021, American Chemical Society; (C) Temperature-pressure electronic skin, Reproduced with permission[211], Copyright 2022, Elsevier Ltd; (D) Ion gel mechanoreceptor, Reproduced with permission[210], Copyright 2021, American Chemical Society; (E) Nanocellulose-based hydrogel for strain sensing, Reproduced with permission[205], Copyright 2021, Elsevier Ltd; (F) Autoluminescent triboelectric fiber, Reproduced with permission[174], Copyright 2022, Elsevier Ltd; (G) Nano/micro aligned fiber, Reproduced with permission[218], Copyright 2022, Elsevier Ltd; (H) Integrated firefighting clothing, Reproduced with permission[175], Copyright 2022, American Chemical Society. AF: Aerogel fiber; CB: carbon black; CNT: carbon nanotubes; CS: chitosan; NW: nanowires; PEDOT: poly (3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene); PSS: poly (styrenesulfonate); PVA: polyvinyl alcohol; PVDF: polyvinylidene fluoride; SFA: self-powered fire alarm; TENG: triboelectric nanogenerator; TIC-AF: thermal-induced conductive aerogel fiber; TPU: thermoplastic polyurethane.

Soft Science
ISSN 2769-5441 (Online)
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