1. Introduction
With the development of industrial technology, various sensors have been invented to tackle various measurement problems. The majority of the traditional sensors are based on metal and semiconductor materials, of which tensile and sensitivity are limited and not suitable for detecting human activities. Compared with the traditional sensors, the flexible sensors overcome the shortcoming of brittleness and possess advantages in biocompatibility, stretchability, wearability and continuous detection [
1]. Based on these unique characters, flexible sensors have been well adopted in the areas of electronic skin, robots, the bionic implants, man–machine interaction systems, as well as other artificial intelligence equipment [
2,
3].
As the basis of flexible sensors, flexible materials have also attracted attention. Generally speaking, flexible materials include nanoparticles, nanowires, carbon nanotubes, graphene, organic materials, and so on [
4]. At present, the most widely used flexible materials are polymers, which belong to the category of organic materials. The hardness of polymers is between the solid materials (e.g., metal, ceramics) and the liquid materials (e.g., hydrargyrum), resulting in a good comparability to human skin [
5]. The most common types of polymer include PDMS (polydimethylsiloxane), PEN (polyethylene glycol terephthalate), PI (polyimide), PEI (polyetherimide), and PET (polyester). PI has high tensile strength and can be continuously used under high temperature. The elongation of PET can reach up to 150%, and it is therefore suitable for particular applications such as artificial organs [
6]. Compared with the above materials, PDMS has better flexibility and it is usually used as a polymer substrate. Combined with the MOEMS (micro optical electronic mechanical system) technique, PDMS has been used in various flexible electronic products, including nodes in the internet of things, medical equipment, solar cells, smart watches, and other devices [
7].
One of the most important applications of PDMS is the flexible force sensor. In recent years, a variety of works on electronic sensors have been published, where the force signal is transferred to an electronic signal (e.g., capacitance, resistance, voltage). Viry et al. [
8] designed a flexible three-dimensional tactile sensor based on PDMS to simulate natural touch. The author measured the value of force by collecting the change of capacitance’s value. Vogt et al. [
9] proposed a soft force sensor using micro-fluidic channels filled with conductive liquid. The normal and in-plane forces can be detected by measuring the electrical resistance changes of the channels when compressed. Lee et al. [
10] presented a flexible piezoelectric sensor to measure the shear and normal forces by adapting polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) and three-dimensionally structured PDMS. Meanwhile, optical sensors are also developed for force measurement in specific cases. Cho et al. [
11] presented a PDMS sensor for measuring fingertip force based on optical waveguide. When the sensor is deformed under applied force, the transmission modes in the PDMS waveguide change, so that the force can be derived by measuring the light intensity loss of the waveguide. In addition, Guo et al. [
12] developed a strain measurement method based on PDMS grating. When the sample is stretched, the strain can be calculated by measuring the position shift of light spot due to the grating diffraction. However, the shape of the grating pattern made by oxygen treatment is not easy to precisely control.
In this study, a force measurement method based on PDMS grating is presented. The PDMS grating is fabricated using the soft casting method, which is precise and easy to follow. On the basis of previous studies [
12], this paper not only introduced the fabrication and force sensing principle of the PDMS grating, but also investigates the property control of the force sensor by adjusting the curing temperature and the mixture ratio of the PDMS. The rest of this paper is organized as follow:
Section 2 introduces the property of PDMS and fabrication of PDMS grating.
Section 3 presents the force measurement principle and experimental setup.
Section 4 demonstrates the experimental results, followed by
Section 5 that concludes the paper.
2. Property of PDMS and fabrication of PDMS grating
In this section, the property of PDMS is introduced, and the process of making flexible gratings is shown step by step.
2.1. Property of PDMS
The material studied in this paper is polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), which is a silicon-based polymer. This material is optically transparent and generally considered inert, non-toxic and non-flammable [
13]. PDMS has the characteristics of elasticity and adjustable elastic modulus. The brief formula of PDMS is shown in
Figure 1.
Generally, PDMS is composed of an elastomer base and elastomer curing agent. By increasing the proportion of curing agent, the cross-linking structure of the material increases, leading to reduction of the elasticity and raise of the hardness. Moreover, heating treatment accelerates the cross-linking reaction [
14]. In 2011, Wang et al. applied macro compression and nano indentation technology to measure the mechanical properties of PDMS [
15]. In recent years, the most widely used mixing ratio of PDMS is 10:1, that is, 10 Sylgard 184 silicone elastomer base and 1 Sylgard 184 silicone elastomer curing agent [
16].
Elastic modulus is an important property of PDMS, which is the quotient of stress to strain. Tensile test determines the strength and plasticity feature of a material by the relationship between stress and strain [
17]. The first stage in the tensile test is so-called elastic deformation where the sample deforms linearly with the stress. With the rise of stress until the sample is yielded, the plastic deformation will occur. The following stage is the strain hardening, where the increasing stress leads to further deformation. Finally, the sample breaks and the stress is called fracture stress [
18]. Particularly, the proposed force sensor works in the elastic deformation stage, where the elastic modulus determines the linear relationship between stress and strain.
To measure the elastic modulus of PDMS samples under different processing parameters, a tension tester is often used. The stress in the stretching direction is the ratio of tension force to cross-sectional area of the sample [
19,
20]. Meanwhile, the strain in the stretching direction is the ratio of tension displacement to the length of the sample. The elastic modulus of the PDMS grating sample can be calculated according to the stress and strain data recorded [
21].
2.2. PDMS Grating Fabrication
Dow Corning Sylgard 184 silicone elastomer base (Sylgard 184A) and Sylgard 184 silicone elastomer curing agent (Sylgard 184B) are used to fabricate PDMS grating.
First, the electronic scale (BSA124S, Sartorius) is applied to weighting materials, and three solutions are prepared in mixing ratios of 5:1, 10:1 and 15:1 (Sylgard 184A to Sylgard 184B in weight) respectively.
Second, to make sure the material is evenly mixed, it is necessary to seal the glass bottle and evenly shake it up by a vortex mixer (Vorte2). Then, the glass bottle is put into a vacuum dryer (DZF-6020) for vacuum treatment for 20min, through which the bubbles in the material are completely removed.
Third, a commercial diffraction grating (#48-462, Edmund Optics) with a groove density of 600 line/mm and a size of 50 × 50 mm is selected as the master grating. The solution is poured evenly on the master grating and spin coated. The spin coater (KW-A4) rotates at 200r/min for 20s and at 500r/min for 15s. After that, put the samples in the vacuum drying oven (DZF-6020) for heating, of which curing temperatures are set to the 70℃, 80℃, and 90℃ respectively for 3h.
Finally, take the samples out from the vacuum drying oven, and a PDMS film cast with grating structure is obtained. For easily mounting on the tension tester, the sample is cut into a shape of 50 × 27mm (length × width) by a fixture and a knife, and the dimension error is ~±0.5mm. The thickness is 0.91±0.05mm measured by a Vernier caliper (VOGEL 201035). It is worth noting that the thickness can be adjusted by changing the speed and time of spin coating.
The whole fabrication process of the PDMS grating is shown in
Figure 2.
The PDMS grating is shown in
Figure 3a and its micro pattern is observed by SEM (scanning electron microscope), as shown in
Figure 3b.
In this paper, three different mixing ratios and three different curing temperatures are chosen as the processing parameters, and nine sets of PDMS grating samples are prepared and tested.
4. Results
4.1. The elastic modulus
Figure 7 illustrates the test results of elastic modulus under nine different sets of mixing ratios and curing temperatures. Ten samples are prepared for each set of mixing ratio and curing temperature, and each data point in
Figure 7 is average of the 10 samples.
On one hand, when the curing temperature is fixed, the elastic modulus under 5:1 mixing ratio is the maximum and the 15:1 one is the minimum. That is, the elastic modulus of PDMS decreases with the rise of proportion of elastomer base, whereas the relationship is not strictly linear.
On the other hand, when the mixing ratio is fixed, the elastic modulus increases with the rise of the temperature in the range of 70–90℃. However, the results under 70℃ and 80℃ are close, whereas the result under 90℃ is significantly higher. Therefore, the relationship of elastic modulus and curing temperature is also not strictly linear.
To investigate the repeatability of the fabrication process, the data distribution of the elastic modulus under curing temperature of 80 ℃ is chosen for the illustration in
Figure 8. The data deviation under mixing ratio of 5:1 is much larger than those under 10:1 and 15:1. That is to say, the precise control of elastic modulus is difficult using the mixing ratio of 5:1, and PDMS gratings with mixing ratios of 10:1 and 15:1 are chosen for further force measurement.
4.2. Force Measurement
Two PDMS grating samples with mixing ratios of 10:1 and 15:1 are tested respectively. For the 10:1 samples, the processed photos of light spots are shown in
Figure 9. The accurate position of each light spot is calculated and illustrated. It is obvious that the spots move closer with the increase of force.
The data series of the light spot position and the corresponding tensile force are analyzed using linear regression method. The fitting curves are shown in
Figure 10.
The discussion on
Figure 10 are listed as below,
(1) Linearity. The coefficient of determination (R2) for the 10:1 sample is 0.9999, and that for 15:1 sample is 0.9985. Therefore, the relationship between light spot position and tensile force is linear, which coincides with Equation (9).
(2) Sensitivity. The slope for the red line (10:1 sample) is –0.57 mm/N, while the slope for the blue line (15:1 sample) is –0.67 mm/N. The 15:1 sample has larger sensitivity than the 10:1 one. As illustrated in
Figure 10, the elastic modulus is ~1.5Mpa for 10:1 mixing ratio and ~1.1Mpa for 15:1 mixing ratio. Therefore, the 15:1 sample has larger deformation than the 10:1 sample under the same external force, leading to a larger shift of the light spot. Based on this, the sensitivity of the PDMS grating force sensor can be adjusted by changing the mixing ratio, or even the cured temperature.
(3) Accuracy. The residual error of linear regression is used to evaluate the accuracy of force measurement. The mean residual error of the data points in
Figure 10 is 0.05N and the maximum error is 0.09N, which is sufficiently precise for force measurement. The error mainly comes from the uncertainty of spot position measurement, which is ~0.05mm. According to the sensitivity analysis above, 0.05mm error in spot position leads to ~0.03N error in force measurement.
(4) Range. The force data in
Figure 10 is ranging from 5N to 12N. However, the maximum range is related with the fracture force of the sample. The fracture force is ~30N by a series of experiments. It can be estimated that linear and reliable results can be obtained using this method when the force is less than 20N.
The force sensor based on PDMS waveguide in [
11] has linearity (R2) of 0.96, error of ~0.3N, and range of 5N. The proposed force sensor based on PDMS grating has a larger footprint than [
11], and possesses better performance. Also using a PDMS grating, the relative error of strain measurement in [
12] is less than 0.6%. In this paper, the average relative error is estimated as 0.59% (0.05N/8.5N, 8.5N is the average force in the test), which is comparable with this key factor in [
12]. However, the proposed soft casting method in this paper does not require any special equipment, and it is even cheaper and easier than the oxygen treatment method in [
12]. Moreover, the PDMS grating pattern can be faithfully replicated from the master grating, which is favorable for mass production.
5. Conclusions
In this paper, a force measurement method based on PDMS grating is proposed. The fabrication of PDMS grating and property of PDMS are also introduced in detail. The following conclusions are drawn:
1. The PDMS grating is cast from a commercial grating, and the fabrication process is easy to follow.
2. The measurement principle is transferring the force signal to the position shift of diffraction light spot, an optical signal. The relationship between light spot position and tensile force is linear (R2>0.9980). The sensitivity is ~0.5–0.7mm/N (mixing ratio 10:1 and 15:1, curing temperature 80℃) and the accuracy is up to 0.05N.
3. Elastic modulus is one of the most important characters for PDMS. It is negatively correlated with the mixing ratio (Sylgard 184A to Sylgard 184B in weight), and positively correlated with the curing temperature. One can control the sensitivity of the proposed force sensor by tuning the elastic modulus.
PDMS material has been widely used in the current research on flexible devices due to its excellent elastic property, good biocompatibility, and adaptability to the light. The proposed method based on PDMS grating is an optical sensing method, and therefore has potential for various specific force measurements in high electromagnetic interference applications. Moreover, the proposed method can be used to study the mechanical property of flexible material itself. This method is not only suitable for the uniform deformation measurement in this paper, but can also be extended to study non-uniform deformation such as large bending. By measuring different points on the sample surface, the stress/strain distribution can be obtained.
A possible improvement of the proposed method is using reflection grating instead of the transmission grating. At the reflection mode, the sensor is easier to package and more suitable for measuring opaque sample. The challenge is coating the PDMS surface with smooth metallic reflective film, which needs further research efforts in the future.