Flexible 'electronic skin' can help heal, detect touch and temperature
Even though it's the first artificial skin sensor to record temperature and humidity, the researchers say that it can sense them quite accurately, reporting back with only a small margin of error for each. The technology is based on gold nanoparticles that are mounted to metal and a flexible plastic. According to the Technion Society, varying the thickness of that plastic can increase or decrease the sensor's overall sensitivity. That setup apparently allows the device to run off of common low-voltage batteries as well — an important trait for what will eventually be a portable sensor. The researchers have already built a prototype of the flexible device, and they believe that it will eventually be adaptable into various types of electronic skin.
Jacob Kastrenakes