TY - JOUR
T1 - Advanced approaches for quantitative characterization of thermal transport properties in soft materials using thin, conformable resistive sensors
AU - Crawford, Kaitlyn E.
AU - Ma, Yinji
AU - Krishnan, Siddharth
AU - Wei, Chen
AU - Capua, Daniel
AU - Xue, Yeguang
AU - Xu, Shuai
AU - Xie, Zhaoqian
AU - Won, Sang Min
AU - Tian, Limei
AU - Webb, Chad
AU - Li, Yajing
AU - Feng, Xue
AU - Huang, Yonggang
AU - Rogers, John A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 The Authors
PY - 2018/7
Y1 - 2018/7
N2 - Noninvasive methods for precise characterization of the thermal properties of soft biological tissues such as the skin can yield vital details about physiological health status including at critical intervals during recovery following skin injury. Here, we introduce quantitative measurement and characterization methods that allow rapid, accurate determination of the thermal conductivity of soft materials using thin, skin-like resistive sensor platforms. Systematic evaluations of skin at eight different locations and of six different synthetic skin-mimicking materials across sensor sizes, measurement times, and surface geometries (planar, highly curvilinear) validate simple scaling laws for data interpretation and parameter extraction. As an example of the possibilities, changes in the thermal properties of skin (volar forearm) can be monitored during recovery from exposure to ultraviolet radiation (sunburn) and to stressors associated with localized heating and cooling. More generally, the results described here facilitate rapid, non-invasive thermal measurements on broad classes of biological and non-biological soft materials.
AB - Noninvasive methods for precise characterization of the thermal properties of soft biological tissues such as the skin can yield vital details about physiological health status including at critical intervals during recovery following skin injury. Here, we introduce quantitative measurement and characterization methods that allow rapid, accurate determination of the thermal conductivity of soft materials using thin, skin-like resistive sensor platforms. Systematic evaluations of skin at eight different locations and of six different synthetic skin-mimicking materials across sensor sizes, measurement times, and surface geometries (planar, highly curvilinear) validate simple scaling laws for data interpretation and parameter extraction. As an example of the possibilities, changes in the thermal properties of skin (volar forearm) can be monitored during recovery from exposure to ultraviolet radiation (sunburn) and to stressors associated with localized heating and cooling. More generally, the results described here facilitate rapid, non-invasive thermal measurements on broad classes of biological and non-biological soft materials.
KW - Epidermal electronics
KW - Erythema
KW - Sunburn
KW - Thermal conductivity
KW - Transient plane source
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85047012181
U2 - 10.1016/j.eml.2018.04.002
DO - 10.1016/j.eml.2018.04.002
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85047012181
SN - 2352-4316
VL - 22
SP - 27
EP - 35
JO - Extreme Mechanics Letters
JF - Extreme Mechanics Letters
ER -