Breathable Nanowood Biofilms as Guiding Layer for Green On-Skin Electronics

Small. 2019 Aug;15(31):e1901079. doi: 10.1002/smll.201901079. Epub 2019 Jun 4.

Abstract

Thin-film electronics are urged to be directly laminated onto human skin for reliable, sensitive biosensing together with feedback transdermal therapy, their self-power supply using the thermoelectric and moisture-induced-electric effects also has gained great attention (skin and on-skin electronics (On-skinE) themselves are energy storehouses). However, "thin-film" On-skinE 1) cannot install "bulky" heatsinks or sweat transport channels, but the output power of thermoelectric generator and moisture-induced-electric generator relies on the temperature difference (∆T ) across generator and the ambient humidity (AH), respectively; 2) lack a routing and accumulation of sweat for biosensing, lack targeted delivery of drugs for precise transdermal therapy; and 3) need insulation between the heat-generating unit and heat-sensitive unit. Here, two breathable nanowood biofilms are demonstrated, which can help insulate between units and guide the heat and sweat to another in-plane direction. The transparent biofilms achieve record-high transport// /transport (//: along cellulose nanofiber alignment direction, ⊥: perpendicular direction) of heat (925%) and sweat (338%), winning applications emphasizing on ∆T/AH-dependent output power and "reliable" biosensing. The porous biofilms are competent in applications where "sensitive" biosensing (transporting// sweat up to 11.25 mm s-1 at the 1st second), "insulating" between units, and "targeted" delivery of saline-soluble drugs are of uppermost priority.

Keywords: breathable; green on-skin electronics; heat-guiding; nanowood biofilms; sweat-guiding.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Anisotropy
  • Biofilms*
  • Humans
  • Nanofibers / chemistry*
  • Pinus / chemistry
  • Porosity
  • Skin*
  • Sweat
  • Wearable Electronic Devices*
  • Wood / chemistry*
  • Wood / ultrastructure
  • X-Ray Diffraction