Injection-on-Skin Granular Adhesive for Interactive Human-Machine Interface

Adv Mater. 2023 Nov;35(48):e2307070. doi: 10.1002/adma.202307070. Epub 2023 Oct 25.

Abstract

Realization of interactive human-machine interfaces (iHMI) is improved with development of soft tissue-like strain sensors beyond hard robotic exosuits, potentially allowing cognitive behavior therapy and physical rehabilitation for patients with brain disorders. Here, this study reports on a strain-sensitive granular adhesive inspired by the core-shell architectures of natural basil seeds for iHMI as well as human-metaverse interfacing. The granular adhesive sensor consists of easily fragmented hydropellets as a core and tissue-adhesive catecholamine layers as a shell, satisfying great on-skin injectability, ionic-electrical conductivity, and sensitive resistance changes through reversible yet robust cohesion among the hydropellets. Particularly, it is found that the ionic-electrical self-doping of the catecholamine shell on hydrosurfaces leads to a compact ion density of the materials. Based on these physical and electrical properties of the sensor, it is demonstrated that successful iHMI integration with a robot arm in both real and virtual environments enables robotic control by finger gesture and haptic feedback. This study expresses benefits of using granular hydrogel-based strain sensors for implementing on-skin writable bioelectronics and their bridging into the metaverse world.

Keywords: granular adhesives; human-machine interface; ionic conductivity; on-tissue printing; strain sensor.

MeSH terms

  • Adhesives
  • Catecholamines
  • Electric Conductivity
  • Humans
  • Hydrogels
  • Ions
  • Robotics*
  • Wearable Electronic Devices*

Substances

  • Adhesives
  • Hydrogels
  • Ions
  • Catecholamines