An Analogue Smart Skin That Is Self-Powered
April 12, 2016 | ACSEstimated reading time: 4 minutes

In order to make robots and robotic technology more human-like and more human-friendly, smart skin technology is a critical element that helps robots sense the world. These electronic or smart skins could help machines to accurately perceive the environment and better assist human owners.
However, conventional smart skins – no matter if they are based on resistance, capacitance or transistors – all need a power supply. It's kind of awkward for users to have a high-tech, state-of-the-art thin, flexible and light-weight smart skin and have to power it with a hard and heavy battery which can just work for hours.
Furthermore, in conventional smart skins higher resolution always means higher energy consumption and complex circuits. These two aspects need to be carefully balanced to result in a practical device. So the obvious question is: Is it possible to achieve higher resolution and at the same time reduce energy consumption?
A self-powered smart skin as the one just recently developed by a team of Chinese researchers fundamentally solves this problem. In this work, the scientists combine the triboelectric effect and planar electrostatic induction and apply it in a subtle device structure for the first time to create a self-powered analogue smart skin.
Structure of analogue smart skins. (a) Schematic diagram of an analogue smart skin. (b) Optical image of the transparent, flexible, and lightweight smart skin. The smart skin with a honey bee landing on it will not deform the peony. (c) SEM image of microstructures on the PDMS film. (d) SEM image of the silver nanowire electrodes. (Reprinted with permission by American Chemical Society)
Reporting their findings in ACS Nano ("Self-Powered Analogue Smart Skin"), a team led by Prof. Haixia Zhang at the National Key Laboratory of Science and Technology on Micro/Nano Fabrication, Peking University, presents a self-powered analogue smart skin to detect location as well as contact velocity, based on a single-electrode contact electrification effect and planar electrostatic induction.
In this paper, the team presents two significant achievements. The first is that their smart skin is intrinsically self-powered.
"We use spontaneous triboelectric charges, combined with planar electrostatic induction, to sense the touch applied on the smart skin," Zhang explains to Nanowerk. "Triboelectric charges occur in our daily life everywhere when two surfaces touch each other. And when the charged surface approaches a metal block (or electrode) it will induce the opposite charge, which is the so-called 'electrostatic induction' effect."
The beauty of this approach is that it makes use of the charges from triboelectric effect – which exist everywhere. Imagine a scenario, when you want to drink some coffee: you walk towards a table, and by doing so the opposite charges will be generated on the surface of shoes and ground respectively; you pick up the cup to drink, and the opposite charges will be generated on the skin of your palm and the handle of the cup; furthermore, even swallowing the coffee will generate charges on the surface of your digestive tract and the coffee.
The Chinese researchers utilize these spontaneous – but often be ignored – charges to make their smart skin completely self-powered.
The intensity of the electrostatic induction effect depends on the distance between the charged surface and the metal electrode. The scientists use fixed electrodes to detect the intensity of the electrostatic induction effect, allowing them to confirm the location based on the relative intensity.
That way, no extra power supply is required for operating the analogue smart skin.
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