DocumentCode :
1445169
Title :
Elastomeric Ionic Hydrogel Sensor for Large Strains
Author :
Manandhar, Prakash ; Calvert, Paul D. ; Buck, John R.
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Massachusetts Dartmouth, North Dartmouth, MA, USA
Volume :
12
Issue :
6
fYear :
2012
fDate :
6/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
2052
Lastpage :
2061
Abstract :
An elastomeric hydrogel membrane containing dissolved salt is demonstrated to be a linear strain sensor for large strains up to 25%. AC sensing circuitry allows the ionic conductor to function as a sensor without polarization effects. The homogeneous gel is shown to be lacking a relaxation or hysteresis response found in the soft composite piezoresistors that are commonly used for large strain sensing. This allows operation of the sensor with minimal post-processing and increased accuracy during real-time operation. The gauge factor of the gel sensor is shown to be near two, consistent with the observation that the strain sensing of the material is solely derived from the deformation of the bulk. The very low Young´s modulus of the gel (~1 kPa) allows deformation of a fabric substrate to be followed without significantly constraining the fabric. A prototype sleeve that uses these sensors for proprioceptive sensing of joint angle motion on a robotic arm is demonstrated as a potential application. Water loss from the hydrogel due to evaporation from the surface is slow. We show that the resulting trend in the impedance of the sensor can be easily corrected by simple signal processing.
Keywords :
Young´s modulus; chemical sensors; deformation; elastomers; hydrogels; hysteresis; manipulators; motion measurement; piezoresistive devices; resistors; strain sensors; AC sensing circuitry; Young´s modulus; bulk deformation; composite piezoresistor; dissolved salt; elastomeric hydrogel membrane; elastomeric ionic hydrogel sensor; fabric substrate deformation; gauge factor; homogeneous gel sensor; hysteresis response; ionic conductor; linear strain sensor; proprioceptive joint angle motion sensor impedance; prototype sleeve; real-time operation; robotic arm; signal processing; surface evaporation; water loss; Fabrics; Frequency measurement; Impedance; Impedance measurement; Robot sensing systems; Strain; Hydrogel sensor; large strain sensing; relaxation response;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Sensors Journal, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1530-437X
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JSEN.2011.2181993
Filename :
6150997
Link To Document :
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