A Self-Powered HMI That’s Also Waterproof

Over the past few decades, human-machine interface (HMI) technologies, especially driven by the demands of wearables, have progressed rapidly—into smaller, lighter, more efficient, more robust forms. Today, we also have various self-powered HMIs, using piezoelectricity and triboelectricity, for example, for power generation. Despite these advances, most wearable HMIs still remain relatively defenseless to moisture, such as sweating and weather conditions.

To address this issue, a research team at the Samueli School of Engineering at the University of California, Los Angeles, have come up with a prototype of a waterproof, flexible, and low-cost skin-integrated HMI. The device comprises a magnetoelastic sensor array that converts ambient biomechanical motion into electrical signals. Their study has been published in Applied Physics Reviews.

The device is intrinsically waterproof, biocompatible, and able to convert the force induced by pressing a finger on it into a continuous electrical signal. The team demonstrated this by controlling a music player and turning an electric lamp on and off. They tested it in a variety of real-world conditions as well, including in a water spray, in heavy rain, and during vigorous physical activity.

The researchers, lead by Jun Chen of UCLA’s Wearable Bioelectronics Research Group, used what is known as the magnetoelastic effect (also known as inverse magnetorestriction), discovered in the 1860s, describing the variation in magnetization of a material under mechanical stress. In fact, the current study expands upon the group’s earlier work demonstrating the magnetoelastic effect in a soft polymer system.

The effect is traditionally observed in rigid metals and metal alloys, Chen says, but in 2021, the researchers observed the effect in his lab, in a soft system composed of magnets ranging in size from micro to nano and a polymer matrix. “[It showed] a measured magnetoelastic effect with a five times enhancement compared to that in metals and metal alloys.” As a result, they dubbed it the “giant magnetoelastic effect.” Speaking of their current work, he adds, “we harnessed this discovery to develop a fundamentally new and wearable HMI.”

The prototype was a 4-by-4-centimeter array comprising two components: a layer of nanomagnets in a porous silicone rubber matrix that converts biomechanical pressure (touch of a finger) into a magnetic response; and a magnetic induction layer of patterned liquid metal coils. The latter responds to the magnetic variations and generates electricity (electromagnetic induction).

“In this way, [our] device works in a self-powered manner,” Chen says. “Compared with conventional HMI devices, which are non-self-powered, our device will [result in] much less power consumption.” [READ MORE]