Wearable (Bio)Sensor Based on Nanomaterials
A special issue of Biosensors (ISSN 2079-6374). This special issue belongs to the section "Wearable Biosensors".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (20 October 2023) | Viewed by 527
Special Issue Editors
Interests: graphene; mxene; sensor
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: functional nanocomposites
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
A huge requirement in the development of reliable wearable sensors with multifaceted signal detection and identification which will be used in the biomedical, entertainment, security, and industrial field. In another word, smart wearable sensor fabrication technology will revolutionize human life and social interactions. Over the decades, plenty of developmental progress has been made to achieve super wearable sensor devices which can fulfill commercial needs such as flexibility, performance stability, repeated operation, temperature stability and ultimately less toxicity to biological systems when it’s interfaced for real-time detection. Besides, significant advancement happened in sensor material manufacturing in terms of modifying physio-chemical properties or utilizing new material combinations on a low dimensional scale. In addition to that various sensing, mechanisms have been explored along with additional features of self-powered wearable sensors which could be widely applicable from bio-physiological monitoring to implantable medical devices. The future generation of wearable sensors comes with the dream idea of an innovative technological sensor platform to extract the different sensor signals from biological phytochemical to physiological signal identification by virtue of developing sensor materials, sensing mechanism, and decision-making module by reflecting on the recent development of novel nanomaterials and its engineering with data science. The forthcoming Special Issue entitled “Wearable (Bio)Sensor Based on Nanomaterials” focuses on the recent development of novel material and its engineering approach for its realization of wearable sensing fabrication with detailed establishment which will meet commercial needs.
Dr. Rajavel Krishnamoorthy
Dr. Yanjun Wan
Dr. R. T. Rajendra Kuma
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- wearable sensor
- metal and metal oxide nanostructures
- carbon materials
- self-powered flexible sensor
- nanogenerator
- 2D layered materials
- biomedical monitoring
- machine learning
- sensor packaging
- sensor electronics
- MXene
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