Preparation and laser sintering of a thermoplastic polyurethane carbon nanotube composite-based pressure sensor

RSC Adv. 2020 Jun 22;10(40):23644-23652. doi: 10.1039/d0ra04479b. eCollection 2020 Jun 19.

Abstract

Selective laser sintering (SLS) is a desirable method for fabricating human motion detecting sensors as it can produce a complex shape with different materials that are machinable to specific applications. The bottleneck in the SLS processing of sensors is the preparation of a material that is both flexible and conductive. In this study, carbon nanotubes (CNTs) were selected as a conductive nanofiller and dispersed into a flexible thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) polymer matrix to prepare TPU/CNT composites for SLS processing pressure sensors. CNTs were first oxidized to prevent them from aggregating in the TPU matrix. TPU/CNT composites were prepared via solution blending and ball milling methods, and the dispersion of the CNTs in the composites was observed by scanning electron microscopy. The thermal properties of TPU/CNT composites with different CNT content were measured, and processing parameters used in the SLS were determined based on differential scanning calorimetry measurements. SLS-processed TPU/CNT composites were prepared with different conductivity and piezoresistive properties. Percolation theory and piezoresistive performance results proved that a 0.25 wt% CNT-containing TPU/CNT composite showed the best pressure sensing ability, and it was successfully used as a sensor to detect plantar pressure distribution in a human foot.