Epidermal Inorganic Optoelectronics for Blood Oxygen Measurement

Adv Healthc Mater. 2017 May;6(9). doi: 10.1002/adhm.201601013. Epub 2017 Feb 28.

Abstract

Flexible and stretchable optoelectronics, built-in inorganic semiconductor materials, offer a wide range of unprecedented opportunities and will redefine the conventional rigid optoelectronics in biological application and medical measurement. However, a significant bottleneck lies in the brittleness nature of rigid semiconductor materials and the performance's extreme sensitivity to the light intensity variation due to human skin deformation while measuring physical parameters. In this study, the authors demonstrate a systematic strategy to design an epidermal inorganic optoelectronic device by using specific strain-isolation design, nanodiamond thinning, and hybrid transfer printing. The authors propose all-in-one suspension structure to achieve the stretchability and conformability for surrounding environment, and they propose a two-step transfer printing method for hybrid integrating III-V group emitting elements, Si-based photodetector, and interconnects. Owing to the excellent flexibility and stretchability, such device is totally conformal to skin and keeps the constant light transmission between emitting element and photodetector as well as the signal stability due to skin deformation. This method opens a route for traditional inorganic optoelectronics to achieve flexibility and stretchability and improve the performance of optoelectronics for biomedical application.

Keywords: blood oxygen; epidermal optoelectronics; flexible and strechable devices; hybrid integration.

MeSH terms

  • Blood Gas Analysis / methods*
  • Humans
  • Nanotechnology / methods*
  • Oxygen / blood*
  • Semiconductors
  • Skin / metabolism

Substances

  • Oxygen