Loading…

Artificial Tactile Receptor System for Sensitive Pressure–Neural Spike Conversion

An artificial tactile receptor is crucial for e-skin in next-generation robots, mimicking the mechanical sensing, signal encoding, and preprocessing functionalities of human skin. In the neural network, pressure signals are encoded in spike patterns and efficiently transmitted, exhibiting low power...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:The journal of physical chemistry letters 2024-05, Vol.15 (22), p.5862-5867
Main Authors: Luo, Shi, Zhang, Bingxue, Wang, Xuejun, Cheng, Guanyin, Wei, Dapeng, Wei, Dacheng
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:An artificial tactile receptor is crucial for e-skin in next-generation robots, mimicking the mechanical sensing, signal encoding, and preprocessing functionalities of human skin. In the neural network, pressure signals are encoded in spike patterns and efficiently transmitted, exhibiting low power consumption and robust tolerance for bit error rates. Here, we introduce a highly sensitive artificial tactile receptor system integrating a pressure sensor, axon-hillock circuit, and neurotransmitter release device to achieve pressure signal coding with patterned spikes and controlled neurotransmitter release. Owing to the heightened sensitivity of the axon-hillock circuit to pressure-mediated current signals, the artificial tactile receptor achieves a detection limit of 10 Pa that surpasses the human tactile receptors, with a wide response range from 10 to 5 × 105 Pa. Benefiting from the appreciable pressure-responsive performance, the potential application of an artificial tactile receptor in robotic tactile perception has been demonstrated, encompassing tasks such as finger touch and human pulse detection.
ISSN:1948-7185
1948-7185
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpclett.4c00869