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What if electronics could bend, heal, and adapt like your own skin? Scientists at the Technical University of Denmark (DTU) have moved one step closer to that goal with a new material that mimics the ...
Anna Maria Coclite is developing artificial skin, even more sensitive than our own. For burn victims and beyond, this "smart skin" has the potential to restore sensation to our body's largest organ.
According to the World Health Organization, high blood pressure affects more than 1.3 billion people around the globe, yet ...
Seoul National University College of Engineering announced that a research team led by Professor Seung Hwan Ko of the ...
Researchers have been studying and developing convincing skin materials for robots for years, with Stanford professor Zhenan Bao touting the first multi-layer self-healing synthetic electronic ...
Picture electronic devices that heal the way our skin repairs itself. Researchers at DTU have developed a new material that makes it possible—a flexible, tough and self-healing material that may ...
These therapeutic materials are not just soothing — they’re smart. Engineered in collaboration with dermatologists, they provide breathable coverage that locks in moisture and medication ...
A new study from Japan details a new skin material based on human cells. The artificial skin has self-healing properties and can adhere to future robots’ metallic structures.
The group is part of Joanneum Research's Materials Institute based in Weiz. Several fields of application are now opening up for the skin-like hybrid material.
Light reflects differently off the material when it is stretched, shifting toward a blue color when elongated and becoming redder when it is condensed, producing the chameleon-like effect.
Researchers designed a chameleon skin-inspired material that changes colors in response to biogenic volatile anime vapors, an indicator of fish and shrimp spoilage. Photo by Lu et al./Cell Reports ...
Researchers have been studying and developing convincing skin materials for robots for years, with Stanford professor Zhenan Bao touting the first multi-layer self-healing synthetic electronic ...