Conventional epidermal bioelectronics usually do not conform well with natural skin surfaces and are susceptible to motion artifact interference, due to incompatible dimensions, insufficient adhesion, imperfect compliance, and usually require complex manufacturing and high costs. We propose in situ forming hydrogel electrodes or electronics (ISF-HEs) that can establish highly conformal interfaces on curved biological surfaces without auxiliary adhesions. The ISF-HEs also have favorable flexibility and soft compliance comparable to human skin (≈0.02 kPa–1), which can stably maintain synchronous movements with deformed skins. Thus, the as-prepared ISF-HEs can accurately monitor large and tiny human motions with short response time (≈180 ms), ...
Ionic gel-based electronic devices are essential in future healthcare/biomedical applications, such ...
The future of medical electronics should be flexible, stretchable and skin-integrated. While modern ...
Recent advances in material sciences have led to the development of novel silicon integrated circuit...
Preparation‐free and skin compliant biopotential electrodes with high recording quality enable weara...
© 2021 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancemen...
Hydrogel-based epidermal electrodes attract widespread attention in health monitoring...
Stable acquisition of electromyography (EMG)/electrocardiograph (ECG) signal is critical and challen...
An accurate extraction of physiological and physical signals from human skin is crucial for health m...
Skin has a dynamic surface and offers essential information through biological signals originating f...
On-skin dry electronics are critical for stably transmitting vital and various electrophysiological ...
Wearable electronics provide valuable insights into physiological health, sports performance, and di...
Noninvasive on-skin electrodes record the electrical potential changes from human skin, which reflec...
On-skin electrodes, as important basic units of wearable devices, is becoming an emerging research a...
Wearable devices have created new opportunities in healthcare and sport sciences by unobtrusively mo...
Accurate and imperceptible monitoring of electrophysiological signals is of primary importance for w...
Ionic gel-based electronic devices are essential in future healthcare/biomedical applications, such ...
The future of medical electronics should be flexible, stretchable and skin-integrated. While modern ...
Recent advances in material sciences have led to the development of novel silicon integrated circuit...
Preparation‐free and skin compliant biopotential electrodes with high recording quality enable weara...
© 2021 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancemen...
Hydrogel-based epidermal electrodes attract widespread attention in health monitoring...
Stable acquisition of electromyography (EMG)/electrocardiograph (ECG) signal is critical and challen...
An accurate extraction of physiological and physical signals from human skin is crucial for health m...
Skin has a dynamic surface and offers essential information through biological signals originating f...
On-skin dry electronics are critical for stably transmitting vital and various electrophysiological ...
Wearable electronics provide valuable insights into physiological health, sports performance, and di...
Noninvasive on-skin electrodes record the electrical potential changes from human skin, which reflec...
On-skin electrodes, as important basic units of wearable devices, is becoming an emerging research a...
Wearable devices have created new opportunities in healthcare and sport sciences by unobtrusively mo...
Accurate and imperceptible monitoring of electrophysiological signals is of primary importance for w...
Ionic gel-based electronic devices are essential in future healthcare/biomedical applications, such ...
The future of medical electronics should be flexible, stretchable and skin-integrated. While modern ...
Recent advances in material sciences have led to the development of novel silicon integrated circuit...