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      Bioinspired Adhesive Architectures: From Skin Patch to Integrated Bioelectronics

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          Stretchable, Skin-Mountable, and Wearable Strain Sensors and Their Potential Applications: A Review

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            Dissolvable films of silk fibroin for ultrathin conformal bio-integrated electronics.

            Electronics that are capable of intimate, non-invasive integration with the soft, curvilinear surfaces of biological tissues offer important opportunities for diagnosing and treating disease and for improving brain/machine interfaces. This article describes a material strategy for a type of bio-interfaced system that relies on ultrathin electronics supported by bioresorbable substrates of silk fibroin. Mounting such devices on tissue and then allowing the silk to dissolve and resorb initiates a spontaneous, conformal wrapping process driven by capillary forces at the biotic/abiotic interface. Specialized mesh designs and ultrathin forms for the electronics ensure minimal stresses on the tissue and highly conformal coverage, even for complex curvilinear surfaces, as confirmed by experimental and theoretical studies. In vivo, neural mapping experiments on feline animal models illustrate one mode of use for this class of technology. These concepts provide new capabilities for implantable and surgical devices.
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              Multifunctional wearable devices for diagnosis and therapy of movement disorders.

              Wearable systems that monitor muscle activity, store data and deliver feedback therapy are the next frontier in personalized medicine and healthcare. However, technical challenges, such as the fabrication of high-performance, energy-efficient sensors and memory modules that are in intimate mechanical contact with soft tissues, in conjunction with controlled delivery of therapeutic agents, limit the wide-scale adoption of such systems. Here, we describe materials, mechanics and designs for multifunctional, wearable-on-the-skin systems that address these challenges via monolithic integration of nanomembranes fabricated with a top-down approach, nanoparticles assembled by bottom-up methods, and stretchable electronics on a tissue-like polymeric substrate. Representative examples of such systems include physiological sensors, non-volatile memory and drug-release actuators. Quantitative analyses of the electronics, mechanics, heat-transfer and drug-diffusion characteristics validate the operation of individual components, thereby enabling system-level multifunctionalities.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Advanced Materials
                Adv. Mater.
                Wiley
                09359648
                August 2019
                August 2019
                February 18 2019
                : 31
                : 34
                : 1803309
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Chemical Engineering; Sungkyunkwan University (SKKU); Seobu-ro, Jangan-gu Suwon Gyeonggi-do 16419 Republic of Korea
                [2 ]SKKU Advanced Institute of Nanotechnology (SAINT); Samsung Advanced Institute for Health Science & Technology (SAIHST); Sungkyunkwan University (SKKU); Seobu-ro, Jangan-gu Suwon Gyeonggi-do 16419 Republic of Korea
                Article
                10.1002/adma.201803309
                30773697
                ff6bd354-b423-4a6c-8e8d-a7cf9e424fe8
                © 2019

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

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