Matrix-Addressed Flexible Capacitive Pressure Sensor With Suppressed Crosstalk for Artificial Electronic Skin
IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices 67(7): 2940-2944
Article 2020 English
Authors
SC
Sujie Chen
ML
Ming Li
YH
Yukun Huang
Abstract
1 min read
Matrix-addressed flexible pressure sensors, being able to accurately measure both local contact force and spatial distribution, are pursued for many electronic skin applications. One key issue to be addressed is that the local force being applied onto the target areas may be passed to the neighboring pixels through deformation of the touched top electrode layer. It causes significant signal crosstalk and also loss of measurement accuracy. A new top electrode layer structure is proposed with the development of processes for matrix-addressed pressure sensor systems. It is composed of a patterned layer of high Young's modulus and a low-modulus encapsulation layer. The former is able to sustain a relatively high processing temperature for forming reliable and high-density electrical connections.The latter is to protect the patterned layer while having low Young's modulus to minimize the spreading of local deformation at the pressed pixel to the surrounding ones. A 10 × 10 matrix-addressed flexible capacitive pressure sensor system is constructed to verify this design, showing effective suppression of the pixel-to-pixel signal crosstalk and improvement of measurement accuracy. The flexible pressure sensor system is integrated onto a prosthetic hand, showing capabilities of differentiating details of massage balls.
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