Results 171 to 180 of about 1,726 (292)

Fully Inkjet‐Printed Organic Electrochemical Transistors: A Path Toward All‐Organic Electronics

open access: yesAdvanced Materials Technologies, EarlyView.
Fully printed organic electrochemical transistors eliminate the metal electrodes used in conventional printed organic electronics. This work demonstrates the state of the art in three applications using PBFDO and PEDOT:PSS materials: a single‐material strain sensor for real‐time detection of finger flexion, an ion sensor for monitoring aqueous NaCl ...
Ali Solgi   +5 more
wiley   +1 more source

Dynamical study of optical soliton solutions of time-fractional perturbed model in ultrafast optical fibers. [PDF]

open access: yesSci Rep
Ouahid L   +7 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Fabrication Technologies for Soft, Multimaterial Optical Fibers for In Vivo Diagnostics and Phototherapy, With a Focus on Extrusion Printing

open access: yesAdvanced Materials Technologies, EarlyView.
Soft multimaterial optical fibers integrate multiple functionalities—such as waveguiding, side emission, sensing, drug delivery or actuation—into a single filament for wearable, implantable, and tissue‐integrated devices for diagnostics and phototherapy.
Zahra Kafrashian   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Wireless Power Transfer Modalities for Implantable Bioelectronics: Electromagnetic, Acoustic, and Magneto‐Dynamic Perspectives

open access: yesAdvanced Materials Technologies, EarlyView.
This review traces the evolution of wireless power transfer (WPT) for implantable medical devices, spanning electromagnetic, magnetoelectric, acoustic, and magneto‐dynamic systems. Quantitative comparisons of power, distance, and device scale highlight trade‐offs across modalities, while emerging hybrid mechanisms reveal strategies to overcome ...
Junyeop Kim, Yoonseok Park
wiley   +1 more source

End‐to‐End Sensing Systems for Breast Cancer: From Wearables for Early Detection to Lab‐Based Diagnosis Chips

open access: yesAdvanced Materials Technologies, EarlyView.
This review explores advances in wearable and lab‐on‐chip technologies for breast cancer detection. Covering tactile, thermal, ultrasound, microwave, electrical impedance tomography, electrochemical, microelectromechanical, and optical systems, it highlights innovations in flexible electronics, nanomaterials, and machine learning.
Neshika Wijewardhane   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

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