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Flexible Textile Strain Sensor Based on Copper-Coated Lyocell Type Cellulose Fabric

Integration of sensors in textile garments requires the development of flexible conductive structures. In this work, cellulose-based woven lyocell fabrics were coated with copper during an electroless step, produced at 0.0284 M copper sulfate pentahydrate, 0.079 M potassium hydrogen L-tartrate, and...

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Autores principales: Root, Waleri, Wright, Tom, Caven, Barnaby, Bechtold, Thomas, Pham, Tung
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6572669/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31052509
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym11050784
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author Root, Waleri
Wright, Tom
Caven, Barnaby
Bechtold, Thomas
Pham, Tung
author_facet Root, Waleri
Wright, Tom
Caven, Barnaby
Bechtold, Thomas
Pham, Tung
author_sort Root, Waleri
collection PubMed
description Integration of sensors in textile garments requires the development of flexible conductive structures. In this work, cellulose-based woven lyocell fabrics were coated with copper during an electroless step, produced at 0.0284 M copper sulfate pentahydrate, 0.079 M potassium hydrogen L-tartrate, and 0.94 M formaldehyde concentrations. High concentrations led to high homogeneous copper reaction rates and the heterogeneous copper deposition process was diffusion controlled. Thus, the rate of copper deposition did not increase on the cellulose surface. Conductivity of copper coatings was investigated by the resistance with a four probe technique during fabric deformation. In cyclic tensile tests, the resistance of coated fabric (19 × 1.5 cm(2)) decreased from 13.2–3.7 Ω at 2.2% elongation. In flex tests, the resistance increased from 5.2–6.6 Ω after 5000 bending cycles. After repeated wetting and drying cycles, the resistance increased by 2.6 × 10(5). The resistance raised from 11–23 Ω/square with increasing relative humidity from 20–80%, which is likely due to hygroscopic expansion of fibers. This work improves the understanding of conductive copper coating on textiles and shows their applicability in flexible strain sensors.
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spelling pubmed-65726692019-06-18 Flexible Textile Strain Sensor Based on Copper-Coated Lyocell Type Cellulose Fabric Root, Waleri Wright, Tom Caven, Barnaby Bechtold, Thomas Pham, Tung Polymers (Basel) Article Integration of sensors in textile garments requires the development of flexible conductive structures. In this work, cellulose-based woven lyocell fabrics were coated with copper during an electroless step, produced at 0.0284 M copper sulfate pentahydrate, 0.079 M potassium hydrogen L-tartrate, and 0.94 M formaldehyde concentrations. High concentrations led to high homogeneous copper reaction rates and the heterogeneous copper deposition process was diffusion controlled. Thus, the rate of copper deposition did not increase on the cellulose surface. Conductivity of copper coatings was investigated by the resistance with a four probe technique during fabric deformation. In cyclic tensile tests, the resistance of coated fabric (19 × 1.5 cm(2)) decreased from 13.2–3.7 Ω at 2.2% elongation. In flex tests, the resistance increased from 5.2–6.6 Ω after 5000 bending cycles. After repeated wetting and drying cycles, the resistance increased by 2.6 × 10(5). The resistance raised from 11–23 Ω/square with increasing relative humidity from 20–80%, which is likely due to hygroscopic expansion of fibers. This work improves the understanding of conductive copper coating on textiles and shows their applicability in flexible strain sensors. MDPI 2019-05-02 /pmc/articles/PMC6572669/ /pubmed/31052509 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym11050784 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Root, Waleri
Wright, Tom
Caven, Barnaby
Bechtold, Thomas
Pham, Tung
Flexible Textile Strain Sensor Based on Copper-Coated Lyocell Type Cellulose Fabric
title Flexible Textile Strain Sensor Based on Copper-Coated Lyocell Type Cellulose Fabric
title_full Flexible Textile Strain Sensor Based on Copper-Coated Lyocell Type Cellulose Fabric
title_fullStr Flexible Textile Strain Sensor Based on Copper-Coated Lyocell Type Cellulose Fabric
title_full_unstemmed Flexible Textile Strain Sensor Based on Copper-Coated Lyocell Type Cellulose Fabric
title_short Flexible Textile Strain Sensor Based on Copper-Coated Lyocell Type Cellulose Fabric
title_sort flexible textile strain sensor based on copper-coated lyocell type cellulose fabric
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6572669/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31052509
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym11050784
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