Dynamical Artifacts in Knitted Resistive Strain Sensors: Effects of Conductive Yarns, Knitting Structures, and Loading Rates

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

This study investigates the dynamic artifacts (DAs) in knitted resistive strain sensors (KRSS) subjected to various deformation types, including stair-wise, trapezoidal, and triangle-type deformations. The presence of DAs, characterized by sharp peak-wise increases in resistance followed by a gradual decline, was observed across all KRSS samples. The amplitude of DA peaks increased with higher deformation velocities. The study also identified the temporal offset between resistance and deformation during linear deformation, suggesting a complex mechanism underlying DAs. The results demonstrate that DAs are most prominent in stepwise and trapezoidal deformations, while continuous defor-mations like triangle-type loading partially mask these artifacts. Manifestation of DAs in KRSS degrades the metrological characteristics of KRSS and cannot be ignored. This paper provides insights into the relationship between KRSS structure, deformation velocity, and DA behaviour, and highlights the need for developing compensation methods to mitigate the impact of DAs on measurement accuracy.

Article activity feed