Stanford engineers have invented a
wireless1 pressure
sensor2 that has already been used to measure brain pressure in lab mice with brain injuries. The
underlying3 technology has such broad potential that it could one day be used to create skin-like materials that can sense pressure, leading to prosthetic devices with the electronic equivalent of a sense of touch.
A nine-member research team led by Chemical Engineering Professor Zhenan Bao
detailed4 two medical applications of this technology in Nature Communications.
In one simple
demonstration5 they used this wireless pressure sensor to read a team member's pulse without
touching6 him.
In a more complex application, they used this wireless device to monitor the pressure inside the
skull7 of a lab mouse, an achievement that could one day lead to better ways to treat human brain injuries.
Bao's wireless sensor is made by placing a thin layer of
specially8 designed rubber between two strips of
copper9. The copper strips act like radio
antennas10. The rubber serves as an
insulator11.
The technology involves beaming radio waves through this simple antenna-and-rubber sandwich. When the device comes under pressure, the copper antennas squeeze the rubber insulator and move infinitesimally closer together.
That tiny change in
proximity12 alters the electrical characteristics of the device. Radio waves passing through the two antennas slow down in terms of frequency. When pressure is relaxed, the copper antennas move apart and the radio waves accelerate in frequency.
The engineers proved that this effect was measurable, giving them a way to
gauge13 the pressure exerted on the device by tracking the frequency of radio waves passing through the device.