TY - JOUR
T1 - Light-Stable, Ultrastretchable Wearable Strain Sensors for Versatile Plant Growth Monitoring
AU - Wang, Siqing
AU - Baek, Janice M.
AU - Lau, Allison P.
AU - Quebedeaux, Jennifer C.
AU - Leakey, Andrew D.B.
AU - Diao, Ying
N1 - This work was primarily supported by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) under grant number 80NSSC 21K0070 (Y.D.). S.W., Y.D., J.C.Q., and A.D.B.L. acknowledge partial support by the Seed Grant of Beckman Institute of Advanced Science and Technology. S.W. acknowledges the Parr fellowship. J.M.B. acknowledges support of the Beckman Graduate Research Assistantship. A.D.B.L. and J.C.Q. were supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant Number 2034777.
PY - 2025/4/30
Y1 - 2025/4/30
N2 - Wearable electronics have been applied to plants for various applications, including microclimate detection, health diagnosis, and growth rate measurement. However, previously reported plant growth strain sensors have limitations in the strain sensing range, optical transparency, and uncertain stability and reproducibility. Our recent work reported a transparent, conjugated polymer-based strain sensor that achieved above 400% operating strain in measurements of growth in a grass. In this work, we develop second-generation plant strain sensors to broaden their application scope in plant growth monitoring by (1) imparting photostability through device engineering and (2) boosting stretchability through direct ink writing. We first fabricate a strain sensor using room-temperature-cured Au-C-Al electrodes, which drastically improve sensor stability under direct light illumination. The sensors are successfully applied to leaves and stems of tomatoes as well as cotyledons and fruits of cucumbers to track the elongation or radial growth rate in day/night cycles. Notably, the cucumber cotyledon is so far the youngest plant organ (3 days after germination) on which a strain sensor has been used for growth monitoring. Moreover, we attain a significantly improved strain sensing range by patterning and encapsulating strain sensors using direct ink writing. An “elastic rope” model is proposed, which revealed that the shape and contour length of patterned sensors jointly determine the strain sensing range along with the intrinsic stretchability of the material. The most stretchable long-horseshoe pattern reaches a maximum apparent operating nominal strain of 1000% tested on grass leaves, a new record in strain sensors applied to plant growth monitoring.
AB - Wearable electronics have been applied to plants for various applications, including microclimate detection, health diagnosis, and growth rate measurement. However, previously reported plant growth strain sensors have limitations in the strain sensing range, optical transparency, and uncertain stability and reproducibility. Our recent work reported a transparent, conjugated polymer-based strain sensor that achieved above 400% operating strain in measurements of growth in a grass. In this work, we develop second-generation plant strain sensors to broaden their application scope in plant growth monitoring by (1) imparting photostability through device engineering and (2) boosting stretchability through direct ink writing. We first fabricate a strain sensor using room-temperature-cured Au-C-Al electrodes, which drastically improve sensor stability under direct light illumination. The sensors are successfully applied to leaves and stems of tomatoes as well as cotyledons and fruits of cucumbers to track the elongation or radial growth rate in day/night cycles. Notably, the cucumber cotyledon is so far the youngest plant organ (3 days after germination) on which a strain sensor has been used for growth monitoring. Moreover, we attain a significantly improved strain sensing range by patterning and encapsulating strain sensors using direct ink writing. An “elastic rope” model is proposed, which revealed that the shape and contour length of patterned sensors jointly determine the strain sensing range along with the intrinsic stretchability of the material. The most stretchable long-horseshoe pattern reaches a maximum apparent operating nominal strain of 1000% tested on grass leaves, a new record in strain sensors applied to plant growth monitoring.
KW - direct ink writing
KW - environmental stability
KW - patterning
KW - plant growth monitoring
KW - precision agriculture
KW - printing
KW - stretchable electronics
KW - wearable strain sensors
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U2 - 10.1021/acssensors.4c03104
DO - 10.1021/acssensors.4c03104
M3 - Article
C2 - 40305745
AN - SCOPUS:105004038463
SN - 2379-3694
VL - 10
SP - 3390
EP - 3401
JO - ACS Sensors
JF - ACS Sensors
IS - 5
ER -