Abstract
Ionic conductive hydrogel-based temperature sensors have emerged as promising candidates due to their good stretchability and biocompatibility. However, the unsatisfactory sensitivity, sluggish response/recovery speed, and poor environmental stability limit their applications for accurate long-term health monitoring and robot perception, especially in extreme environments. To address these concerns, here, the stretchable temperature sensors based on a double-side elastomer-encapsulated thin-film organohydrogel (DETO) architecture are proposed with impressive performance. It is found that the water-polyol binary solvent, organohydrogel film, and sandwiched device structure play important roles in the temperature sensing performance. By modifying the composition of binary solvent and thicknesses of organohydrogel and elastomer films, the DETO microsensors realize a thickness of only 380 μm, unprecedented temperature sensitivity (37.96%/°C), fast response time (6.01 s) and recovery time (10.53 s), wide detection range (25-95.7 °C), and good stretchability (40% strain), which are superior to those of conventional hydrogel-based sensors. Furthermore, the device displays good environmental stability with negligible dehydration and prolonged operation duration. With these attributes, the wearable sensor is exploited for the real-time monitoring of various physiological signals such as human skin temperature and respiration patterns as well as temperature perception for robots.