Oman Daily Observer

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NEW YORK: Engineers in the US have invented an inexpensiv­e printed sensor that can monitor the tread of car tyres in real time, warning drivers when the rubber meeting the road has grown dangerousl­y thin.

“With all of the technology and sensors that are in today’s cars, it’s kind of crazy to think that there’s almost no data being gathered from the only part of the vehicle that is actually touching the road,” said Aaron Franklin, Associate Professor at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina.

“Our tyre tread sensor is the perfect marriage between high-end technology and a simple solution,” Franklin said.

In collaborat­ion with Fetch Automotive Design Group, the researcher­s demonstrat­ed a design using metallic carbon nanotubes (tiny cylinders of carbon atoms just onebillion­th of a metre in diameter) that can track millimetre-scale changes in tread depth with 99 per cent accuracy.

The sensor design was detailed in IEEE Sensors Journal.

The technology relies well understood mechanics electric fields interact with conductors.

The core of the sensor is formed by placing two small, electrical­ly conductive electrodes very close to each other.

By applying an oscillatin­g electrical voltage to one and grounding the other, an electric field forms between the electrodes.

While most passes directly on the of how metallic of this electric field between the two electrodes, some between them.

When a material is placed on top of the electrodes, it interferes with this so-called “fringing field.”

By measuring this interferen­ce through the electrical response of the grounded electrode, it is possible to determine the thickness of the material covering the sensor, the researcher­s said.

While the sensor could be made from a variety of materials and methods, the best results were obtained by printing electrodes made of metallic carbon nanotubes on a flexible polyimide film, according to the study. of the field arcs

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