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Self-Powered Wearable Displacement Sensor for Continuous Respiratory Monitoring and Human-Machine Synchronous Control

  • Yan Shi
  • , Heran Li
  • , Liman Yang*
  • , Yixuan Wang*
  • , Zhibo Sun
  • , Chi Zhang*
  • , Xianpeng Fu
  • , Yanxia Niu
  • , Chengwei Han
  • , Fei Xie*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Beihang University
  • Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • General Hospital of People's Liberation Army

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Flexible wearable electronic devices play a vital role in daily monitoring, medical diagnosis, and human-computer interaction, and such devices have a great demand for portability, integration, comfort, and self-power. In this study, a triboelectric nanogenerator integrated into a flexible chest belt is proposed as a displacement sensor to monitor the displacement and frequency of thoracic expansion. Based on three parallel interpolation electrode structures with phase differences, the Triboelectric Nanogenerators's(TENG) output signal pulse number can characterize the sliding displacement, with a resolution of more than 1 mm and a durability of more than 700,000 cycles. Based on the flexible printed circuit processing technology, the volume of the sensor is less than 8.5 cm3, and the weight is less than 3.2 g, which improves the portability of the device. Based on wireless radio frequency technology, the collected signals are transmitted to the upper computer, and then the monitoring of respiratory physiological signals and the human-machine synchronous control of the ventilator are achieved within the overshoot of 1.5% and the control error of 5% through a simulation machine. This work provides a sensing method for daily and medical respiratory monitoring and demonstrates the enormous potential of frictional electric sensors in intelligent medical applications.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2401189
JournalSmall Methods
Volume9
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Oct 2025

Keywords

  • pneumatic servo system
  • respiratory monitoring
  • self-powered
  • triboelectric nanogenerator
  • wearable electronics

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