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Technology road map of flexible wearable devices.

Technology road map of flexible wearable devices.

Contexts in source publication

Context 1
... proposed in scientific literature to collect physiological data from the body for personalized medicine, point-of-care diagnostics, and home and fitness monitoring.Wearable monitoring is possible through devices such as shirts, necklaces, tattoos, lenses, headbands, smart wristbands, watches, shoes, eyeglasses, wristbands, and patches [7][8][9]. Fig. 3 ...
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... printing involves forcing a thick ink through a nozzle that is fixed to an XYZ stage, and the pattern produced can be scaled as needed as shown in Fig. 3a. However, the rheology characteristics of stable inks must be adjusted for this printing method. Ink with high viscosity at moderate shear rates is preferred to ensure that it can be extruded in a constant line pattern parallel to the nozzle movement without spreading too quickly across the substrate. The ink should exhibit a ...
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... use of safe and biocompatible thermoplastic printing materials like Poly Lactic Acid (PLA) and Poly Vinyl Alcohol (PVA) is preferred to create the device, as shown in Fig. 3b. For the oral delivery of mouthguards, FDM employed a two-step process. Firstly, the subjects maxilla was scanned to generate a 3D model for the printing process. Then, the structural materials, including drugs, PVA, and "PLA", were melted and [54] extruded into the customized, 3D-designed structure, guided by the scanned template. ...
Context 4
... in Fig. 3b. For the oral delivery of mouthguards, FDM employed a two-step process. Firstly, the subjects maxilla was scanned to generate a 3D model for the printing process. Then, the structural materials, including drugs, PVA, and "PLA", were melted and [54] extruded into the customized, 3D-designed structure, guided by the scanned template. Fig. 3c. shows that Direct ink writing printing in this method involves extruding fluid inks to print the desired structures while controlling the nozzle location according to a 3D model. DIW printing mainly uses ink that has a viscosity proportional to the shear rate rather than the shear stress. Ink viscosity can range from 105 Pa s (at a ...

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... These AM techniques, which build components layer by layer based on their computer-aided design (CAD) models, were first created in the 1980s [82]. AM technologies are unconstrained by the limits imposed by traditional manufacturing processes and may generate components with far more complicated forms [83]. ...
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