Department of Materials Science and Engineering, McCormick School of Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208, USA.
Center for Bio-Integrated Electronics, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208, USA.
Sci Adv. 2019 Jan 25;5(1):eaau6356. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.aau6356. eCollection 2019 Jan.
Noninvasive, in situ biochemical monitoring of physiological status, via the use of sweat, could enable new forms of health care diagnostics and personalized hydration strategies. Recent advances in sweat collection and sensing technologies offer powerful capabilities, but they are not effective for use in extreme situations such as aquatic or arid environments, because of unique challenges in eliminating interference/contamination from surrounding water, maintaining robust adhesion in the presence of viscous drag forces and/or vigorous motion, and preventing evaporation of collected sweat. This paper introduces materials and designs for waterproof, epidermal, microfluidic and electronic systems that adhere to the skin to enable capture, storage, and analysis of sweat, even while fully underwater. Field trials demonstrate the ability of these devices to collect quantitative in situ measurements of local sweat chloride concentration, local sweat loss (and sweat rate), and skin temperature during vigorous physical activity in controlled, indoor conditions and in open-ocean swimming.
通过使用汗液进行无创、原位的生化监测,可以实现新形式的医疗诊断和个性化的补水策略。最近在汗液收集和传感技术方面的进展提供了强大的功能,但由于在消除周围水的干扰/污染、在存在粘性阻力和/或剧烈运动时保持牢固的附着力以及防止收集的汗液蒸发方面存在独特的挑战,它们在极端环境(如水生或干旱环境)中并不有效。本文介绍了用于防水、表皮、微流控和电子系统的材料和设计,这些系统附着在皮肤上,可实现汗液的捕获、存储和分析,即使在完全水下的情况下也是如此。现场试验证明了这些设备在受控室内条件和开放水域游泳中剧烈身体活动期间收集局部汗液氯化物浓度、局部汗液流失(和出汗率)以及皮肤温度的定量原位测量的能力。