Sept. Seminar: Electronic skins for robotics and wearables—Sept. 19

Please join us for the September MIT.nano Seminar Series:

Prof. Takao Someya

Prof. Takao SomeyaProfessor
Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
The University of Tokyo

Date: Monday, September 19, 2022
Time: 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM EDT
Location: Virtual, with livestream viewing in 12-0168

>>Join the webinar via Zoom.

 

 

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Abstract

The human skin is a large-area, multi-point, multi-modal, stretchable sensor, which has inspired the development of electronic skin for robots that simultaneously detect pressure and thermal distribution. By improving its conformability, the application of electronic skin, some of which are created using high-definition printing technology, has expanded from robots to human bodies, reaching a point where ultrathin semiconductor membrane can be directly laminated onto the skin.

Such intimate and conformal integration of electronics with the human skin allows continuous monitoring of health conditions. The ultimate goal of the electronic skin is to non-invasively measure human activities under natural conditions, enabling electronic skin and human skin to interactively reinforce each other. In this talk, Someya will review recent progress in stretchable thin-film electronics for applications to robotics and wearables, and address issues and the future prospect of electronic skin.

Biography

Takao Someya was appointed dean of the School of Engineering at the University of Tokyo in 2020, where he has been member of the faculty since 1997 and professor since 2009. He has also conducted research at Columbia University’s Nanocenter and at Bell Labs.

Someya served on the board of directors of the Material Research Society from 2009-2011. He has been chief scientist at RIKEN and team leader at its Center for Emergent Matter Science since 2015. His expertise is stretchable and organic electronics, developing the world's first stretchable electronic skin for robotic application. He was awarded the 16th Leo Esaki Prize in 2019.