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      Sensitive, high-strain, high-rate bodily motion sensors based on graphene-rubber composites.

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          Abstract

          Monitoring of human bodily motion requires wearable sensors that can detect position, velocity and acceleration. They should be cheap, lightweight, mechanically compliant and display reasonable sensitivity at high strains and strain rates. No reported material has simultaneously demonstrated all the above requirements. Here we describe a simple method to infuse liquid-exfoliated graphene into natural rubber to create conducting composites. These materials are excellent strain sensors displaying 10(4)-fold increases in resistance and working at strains exceeding 800%. The sensitivity is reasonably high, with gauge factors of up to 35 observed. More importantly, these sensors can effectively track dynamic strain, working well at vibration frequencies of at least 160 Hz. At 60 Hz, we could monitor strains of at least 6% at strain rates exceeding 6000%/s. We have used these composites as bodily motion sensors, effectively monitoring joint and muscle motion as well and breathing and pulse.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          ACS Nano
          ACS nano
          1936-086X
          1936-0851
          Sep 23 2014
          : 8
          : 9
          Affiliations
          [1 ] School of Physics, CRANN and AMBER, Trinity College Dublin , Dublin 2, Ireland.
          Article
          10.1021/nn503454h
          25100211
          edcf369b-23bd-4165-8608-12649dd466a6
          History

          bodily motion sensors,dynamic strain,graphene−rubber composites,strain sensors

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