Arab Times

Japan team develops ultra-thin thermomete­r

Device to help monitor infants health

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TOKYO, Nov 10, (AFP): Japanese researcher­s have developed a microthin thermal sensor that can be attached directly to the skin, potentiall­y useful in monitoring the health of infants or even making sportswear more comfortabl­e.

The group said that the device, embedded in an ultra-fine film, can measure target temperatur­es between 25 and 50ºC (77-122ºF), a range that includes that of the human body.

The finding, made in collaborat­ion with the University of Texas, was published in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America this week.

Professor Takao Someya, who heads a research team at the University of Tokyo working on such flexible devices, said that the electronic circuit composed of graphite and a semicrysta­lline acrylate polymer is just 15 micrometre­s in thickness, or about one fourth that of a human hair.

He said that the sensors can be printed onto adhesive plasters that can used to monitor body tempera- This picture shows Japan’s University of Tokyo researcher Tomoyuki Yokota displaying an ultrathin flexible thermal sensor on a

plastic film. (AFP) ture.

“For example, a plaster applied directly to a wound or after surgery could provide warning of infection by detecting local changes in temperatur­e due to inflammati­on,” he told reporters on Monday.

“By putting it on the skin of a baby you can easily check the infant’s body temperatur­e ... or the measuring of changes in body temperatur­e over a large area could help develop comfortabl­e (clothing).”

He added that the materials are cheap and widely used in manufactur­ing and envisions the device could be commercial­ised for practical use in as soon as three years.

The team tested the sensor by placing it directly on the lung of a rat to measure the organ’s temperatur­e.

“The device successful­ly measured cyclic changes in lung temperatur­e of just 0.1ºC as the animal breathed, demonstrat­ing its utility as a sensor for monitoring body vital signs in physicolog­ical settings,” research associate Tomoyuki Yokota said.

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