1. Academic Validation
  2. A Biomimetic Fiber-Entangled Permeable Electronic Skin for Strain-Insensitive and High-Resolution Tactile Sensing

A Biomimetic Fiber-Entangled Permeable Electronic Skin for Strain-Insensitive and High-Resolution Tactile Sensing

  • Adv Sci (Weinh). 2025 Aug 28:e12111. doi: 10.1002/advs.202512111.
Ruixiang Qu 1 Menghui Ji 2 Ningjing Zhou 1 3 Rongdi Zhang 4 Huijiao Ji 5 Min Zou 2 Huacheng He 4 Yu Zhang 1 Fuguang Chen 1 3 Mengjia Chen 1 3 Jiujiang Ji 6 Zhijun Ma 1 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Research Center for New Materials Computing, Zhejiang Lab, Hangzhou, 311100, China.
  • 2 Research Center for Computing Sensing, Zhejiang Lab, Hangzhou, 311100, China.
  • 3 School of Materials Science and Engineering, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, 310058, China.
  • 4 Oujiang Laboratory, Wenzhou, 325000, China.
  • 5 Department of Pharmacology, School of Pharmacy, Southwest Medical University, Luzhou, 646000, China.
  • 6 Department of Chemistry, Tsinghua University, Beijing, ‌100084‌, China.
Abstract

Electronic skins (e-skins) incorporating island architectures represent a promising platform for strain-insensitive tactile sensing by mechanically decoupling sensing units from deformations. However, conventional island designs encounter stress concentration issues caused by inherent modulus mismatches, critically limiting achievable island densities. This limitation forces a stubborn trade-off between strain-insensitivity and sensing resolution. Here, inspired by the entangled elastin networks surrounding human tactile receptors, a biomimetic fiber-entangled island architecture is proposed that addresses the stress concentration issue, providing a viable solution for strain-insensitive and high-resolution tactile sensing. The mechanism by which the fiber-entangled architecture mitigates stress concentration is based on the strain-dependent reorientation of its constituent fibers. As a demonstration of this solution, a pressure sensing e-skin exhibiting simultaneous high resolution (100 unit cm-2) and low strain interference (gauge factor < 0.03) is developed. Implemented with artificial neural networks, the e-skin demonstrates proof-of-concept functionality as a wearable Braille point-to-read system. The fiber-entangled architecture proposed here will emerge as a versatile platform for next-generation humanoid sensing.

Keywords

electronic skins; high‐resolution; pressure imaging; strain‐insensitive; wearable devices.

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