• DocumentCode
    71018
  • Title

    Flexible Technologies for Self-Powered Wearable Health and Environmental Sensing

  • Author

    Misra, Veena ; Bozkurt, Alper ; Calhoun, Benton ; Jackson, Thomas ; Jur, Jesse ; Lach, John ; Bongmook Lee ; Muth, John ; Oralkan, Omer ; Ozturk, Mehmet ; Trolier-McKinstry, Susan ; Vashaee, Daryoosh ; Wentzloff, David ; Yong Zhu

  • Author_Institution
    Electr. & Comput. Eng. Dept., North Carolina State Univ., Raleigh, NC, USA
  • Volume
    103
  • Issue
    4
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    Apr-15
  • Firstpage
    665
  • Lastpage
    681
  • Abstract
    This article provides the latest advances from the NSF Advanced Self-powered Systems of Integrated sensors and Technologies (ASSIST) center. The work in the center addresses the key challenges in wearable health and environmental systems by exploring technologies that enable ultra-long battery lifetime, user comfort and wearability, robust medically validated sensor data with value added from multimodal sensing, and access to open architecture data streams. The vison of the ASSIST center is to use nanotechnology to build miniature, self-powered, wearable, and wireless sensing devices that can enable monitoring of personal health and personal environmental exposure and enable correlation of multimodal sensors. These devices can empower patients and doctors to transition from managing illness to managing wellness and create a paradigm shift in improving healthcare outcomes. This article presents the latest advances in high-efficiency nanostructured energy harvesters and storage capacitors, new sensing modalities that consume less power, low power computation, and communication strategies, and novel flexible materials that provide form, function, and comfort. These technologies span a spatial scale ranging from underlying materials at the nanoscale to body worn structures, and the challenge is to integrate them into a unified device designed to revolutionize wearable health applications.
  • Keywords
    biomedical transducers; body sensor networks; capacitor storage; energy harvesting; environmental factors; health care; nanosensors; patient monitoring; power measurement; sensor fusion; wireless sensor networks; ASSIST center; Advanced Self-Powered Systems of Integrated Sensors and Technology; NSF; architecture data stream; body worn structure; environmental sensing; flexible technology; healthcare; medically validated sensor data; multimodal sensing; nanostructured energy harvester; nanotechnology; personal health monitoring; power consumption; self-powered wearable health; storage capacitor; wireless sensing device; Biomedical monitoring; Conductivity; Energy harvesting; Flexible electronics; Legged locomotion; Sensors; Thermal conductivity; Wearable computing; Atomic layer deposition; CMUT; PZT; TEG; environmental monitoring; environmental sensor; flexible electrode; motion harvesting; physiological sensor; piezoelectric; self-powered; silver nanowire; thermoelectrics; ultra-low power; ultra-low power SOC; volatile organic compound sensor; wearable device;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Proceedings of the IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9219
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JPROC.2015.2412493
  • Filename
    7110423