Imagine sticking a patch made of flexible electronics on your skin that
could read your body temperature, monitor your blood circulation, even
tell you when you need to put on sunscreen — and that wouldn't leave the
skin underneath it clammy the way Band-Aids do.
A team of researchers at Northwestern University in Illinois and the
University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign say they have built such a
patch, and it's about the size of a bandage. It's made of plastic and
thousands of tiny liquid crystals, not unlike the ones that light up computer and smartphone screens. It's so flexible that it molds to the body like a second skin.
The device was made to detect changes in the temperature of the skin
beneath it; the liquid crystals change color in response to body heat.
There are so many crystals, some 3,600 of them, that they can actually
depict a heat map, or a picture of what lies below the skin. "It's like
the stuff they used to have in mood rings," said John A. Rogers, a
professor of materials science at the University of Illinois whose lab
collaborated on the project.
This device, however, is sophisticated enough to diagnose very real
problems. The device reveals the temperature of the skin beneath it with
with high precision, which is important because skin temperature
reflects underlying characteristics, such as blood flow, he said. And
the device presents the data in a useable format. "We can get a readout
using color," Rogers told Live Science.
A temperature-sensing device that could be attached to a person's skin, and that is so unobtrusive that people forget they are wearing it, would be a great help to physicians, Rogers said.
For example, the device could reveal problems such as poor circulation
in the extremities, which can be a symptom of diabetes, or an early sign
of heart disease.
The device could also be used to detect some types of injuries in the
skin and tissue just underneath the sensor. This is because the tissue
near an injury site generally warms up, in a sign that inflammation or
infection might be on the way. The sensor could also yield information
such as how hydrated the skin is, the researchers said.
To test their device, the researchers attached a small antenna with the
sensor, as well as a heating element. They sent a signal to the antenna
to turn on the heating element, and found they could measure the
distribution and diffusion of that heat through the skin and tissue.
It's possible that researchers could add other kinds of sensors to the
device, too. For example, an ultraviolet light sensor combined with a
sensor for moisture could alert the wearer that they are in danger of getting sunburned, for instance if the UV levels are high and the skin is becoming dry and hot.
And because the device allows air to pass through it, the skin beneath
the sensor can "breathe." That means users would not get the clammy
sweat that accumulates under bandages, which can cause irritation,
Rogers said.
The device is so small that it doesn't need a battery. There's a
wireless and flexible power system on the back, which can run on power
from a remote source, said Yihui Zhang, an assistant professor of civil
engineering at Northwestern and one of the leaders of the research
effort.
Rogers said the cost of the device should be relatively low, since the
sensor doesn't use any exotic materials or parts. "We're talking about a
few dollars," he said.
The scientists are working with a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based company called MC10 Inc. to commercialize the technology.
A paper outlining the research appeared in the Sept. 19 issue of the journal Nature Communications.
original source by: http://www.livescience. com/48109-flexible-skin-sensor-track-health.html
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