As wearable health monitoring advances, the demand for flexible pressure sensors that combine high sensitivity, full-range linearity, and medical-grade accuracy continues to grow. Now, researchers from the Chongqing Institute of Green and Intelligent Technology, led by Professors Chao Zhang and Jun Yang, have developed a bio-inspired dual mechanism iontronic pressure sensor (FIPS) that mimics the structure of human skin, achieving record linearity and sensitivity for real-time musculoskeletal load monitoring.
Why this sensor matters
- Hyperlinear response: Keeps R2 > 0.997 at 0–1 MPa, overcoming the typical trade-off between sensitivity and linearity in flexible sensors.
- Medical grade accuracy: Achieves 1.8% error in ground reaction force (GRF) estimation – far superior to non-linear sensors (6.5% error).
- Scalable and stable: Demonstrates excellent reproducibility, long-term stability and scalability for smart sole integration.
Innovative design and features
- Dual mechanism detection: Combines contact area expansion (∝P¹ᐟ3) and ion concentration modulation (∝P²ᐟ3) to produce a linear capacitance-pressure response (C ∝ P).
- Leather-inspired construction: Uses woven iontronic fabric embedded in a polyurethane matrix, mimicking the dermal collagen-elastic fiber network for wide-range mechanical adaptability.
- High LSF: Achieves a linear detection factor (LSF) of 242,000 – the highest reported to date for flexible pressure sensors.
Applications and performance
- Smart insole integration: Allows real-time monitoring of tibial load during walking and running on various terrains (concrete, track, turf).
- Gait analysis: Accurately classifies gait speeds with ~100% accuracy and predicts tibial pressure with high accuracy.
- Resistance: Withstands >10,000 load cycles and maintains consistent performance under bending, humidity and temperature fluctuations.
Conclusion and perspective
This work introduces a global design pattern for high-performance linear flexible sensors, bridging the gap between biological inspiration and engineering precision. The FIPS platform opens new avenues for wearable biomechanics, sports medicine and rehabilitation robotics, offering a transformative tool for early fracture risk prediction and personalized musculoskeletal health monitoring.
Stay tuned for more innovations from Professor Chao Zhang and Professor Jun Yang’s team at the Chongqing Institute of Green and Intelligent Technology!
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