3_Shape-programmable lamellar aerogel pressure sensing

Figure 0: Demonstration of the application during sleep.

๐Ÿ—“ Published: October 2024
๐Ÿ“š Journal/Conference: Advanced Functional Materials


๐Ÿ” Abstract

  • The work introduces a lamellar shape-memory conductive (LSMC) aerogel for pressure sensing.
  • The lamellar structure enables excellent compression properties, supporting high sensitivity and wide detection range for wearable electronics.
  • Application focus: bedridden patients โ€” for pressure injury prevention.

๐Ÿ’ญ Some thoughts I had while reading:

  • The paper frequently uses the word subtle โ€” but whatโ€™s the actual resolution requirement for their application?
  • (Andโ€ฆ same question for myself!)

๐Ÿง—โ€โ™‚๏ธ Technical Challenges

  1. Detecting subtle and dynamic motions requires:

    • High sensitivity
    • Wide sensing range
    • Control of material modulus via microengineering strategies:
      • Porous layers
      • Micropatterned structures
      • Multilayer-filled designs
  2. Conformal attachment to irregular and dynamic skin surfaces remains a significant challenge.


๐ŸŒŸ Methodology

๐Ÿงฉ LSMC Aerogel Fabrication

Recently, freezing-based methods have gained popularity in structural design for sensors.

Fabrication process

Figure 2: Illustration of the fabrication process of the LSMC aerogel

๐Ÿ” What Iโ€™ve learned:
Cryopolymerization is a polymerization process carried out at sub-zero temperatures, where ice crystals act as a template to form highly porous polymer networks upon thawing.


๐Ÿ” Mechanical Properties

Compressive Resilience

  • Traditional isotropic aerogels deform plastically under large compressive strain โ€” not ideal for flexible electronics.
  • Here, the researchers used bidirectional freezing to guide ice crystal growth, forming anisotropic lamellar pores that offer better elastic recovery.

๐Ÿ“˜ What Iโ€™ve learned:

Isotropic materials have identical properties in all directions, whereas anisotropic materials exhibit direction-dependent behavior due to structural or molecular orientation.

โ“ My question: What about PDMS and graphene?

๐Ÿง  Current answer:

  • PDMS: isotropic
  • Graphene: anisotropic
  • Composite behavior depends on grapheneโ€™s dispersion or alignment within the PDMS matrix.

๐Ÿค– Pressure Sensing Performance

  • The LSMC aerogel-based electronics show:
    • High sensitivity: 1.42 kPaโปยน
    • Wide sensing range: up to ~164 kPa
  • Durability: Maintains performance over 3500 compression cycles at 1 kPa.

๐Ÿ” Shape-Memory Performance

  • Exhibits a meltingโ€“crystallization transition, supporting thermally triggered shape-memory effect (SME).
Shape-memory curve

Figure 3: Shape-memory properties of the LSMC aerogel.

3D electronics on curved surface

Figure 4: Programming 3D electronics on curved surfaces using SME.

โ“ My question:

  • When the electronics change shape, is recalibration needed?
  • Does the sensitivity change after deformation?
    ๐Ÿ“ง I should consider emailing the authors to ask.

๐Ÿงช A Proof-of-Concept System

Proof-of-concept system

Figure 5: Point-of-care pressure monitoring system for injury prevention.


๐Ÿง  Reflections

This paper reminds me that sensing materials and structures are inseparable. The structure isnโ€™t just passive โ€” itโ€™s part of the intelligence. The idea of embedding shape-memory into the mechanical backbone is so clever.

It also prompts me to think about my own work:

  • Should I consider adding shape-memory components?
  • How would anisotropy affect my insole design?

3_Shape-programmable lamellar aerogel pressure sensing

https://emilypeng2017.github.io/2025/05/25/3_shape programmable/

Author

Sai (Emily) Peng

Posted on

2025-05-25

Updated on

2025-07-10

Licensed under

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