Towards skin-acetone monitors with selective sensitivity: dynamics of PANI-CA films
Anthony Annerino, Michael Faltas, Manoj Srinivasan, Pelagia-Irene, Gouma

TL;DR
This research develops a non-invasive wearable sensor using PANI-CA films that detect gaseous acetone emitted from the skin, with promising sensitivity, selectivity, and potential for continuous health monitoring.
Contribution
The study introduces a chemo-mechanical sensor based on PANI-CA films that can detect skin-emitted acetone non-invasively, with demonstrated modeling of responses and initial validation.
Findings
Films respond selectively to gaseous acetone.
Linear models explain 40% of shape change variance.
Models suggest inherent sensitivity and selectivity of the films.
Abstract
Most research aimed at measuring biomarkers on the skin is only concerned with sensing chemicals in sweat using electrical signals, but these methods are not truly non-invasive nor non-intrusive because they require substantial amounts of sweat to get a reading. This project aims to create a truly non-invasive wearable sensor that continuously detects the gaseous acetone (a biomarker related to metabolic disorders) that ambiently comes out of the skin. Composite films of polyaniline and cellulose acetate, exhibiting chemo-mechanical actuation upon exposure to gaseous acetone, were tested in the headspaces above multiple solutions containing acetone, ethanol, and water to gauge response sensitivity, selectivity, and repeatability. The bending of the films in response to exposures to these environments was tracked by an automatic video processing code, which was found to out-perform an…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials · Conducting polymers and applications · Advanced Chemical Sensor Technologies
