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Dive into the research topics where Ruya Li is active.

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Featured researches published by Ruya Li.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Flexible Transparent Iontronic Film for Interfacial Capacitive Pressure Sensing

Baoqing Nie; Ruya Li; Jennifer Cao; James D. Brandt; Tingrui Pan

A flexible, transparent iontronic film is introduced as a thin-film capacitive sensing material for emerging wearable and health-monitoring applications. Utilizing the capacitive interface at the ionic-electronic contact, the iontronic film sensor offers a large unit-area capacitance (of 5.4 μF cm(-2) ) and an ultrahigh sensitivity (of 3.1 nF kPa(-1) ), which is a thousand times greater than that of traditional solid-state counterparts.


Lab on a Chip | 2014

Iontronic microdroplet array for flexible ultrasensitive tactile sensing

Baoqing Nie; Ruya Li; James D. Brandt; Tingrui Pan

An iontronic microdroplet array (IMA) device, using an ultra-large interfacial capacitance at the highly elastic droplet-electrode contact, has been proposed for flexible tactile sensing applications. The transparent IMA sensors consist of an array of nanoliter droplets sandwiched between two polymeric membranes with patterned transparent electrodes, forming the electrical double layers with remarkable unit-area capacitance. Under external loading, the membrane deformation results in the circumferential expansion at the highly elastic droplet-electrode contact, which offers a completely new capacitive sensing scheme with a dramatic increase in sensitivity. Under the simple device architecture, the IMA has achieved device sensitivity of 0.43 nF kPa(-1) and a minimal detectable pressure of 33 Pa, the highest reported values for its dimension. In addition, the hysteresis of the droplet deformation has been reduced by introducing a layer of hydrophobic coating to the conductive electrode surface, ensuring a fast mechanical response (on the order of several milliseconds). To demonstrate the utility of the transparent flexible IMA sensor, it has been successfully mounted onto a fingertip setting to map different surface topologies and embedded into a wristband to resolve dynamic pressure waves throughout cardiovascular cycles.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Supercapacitive Iontronic Nanofabric Sensing

Ruya Li; Yang Si; Zijie Zhu; Yaojun Guo; Yingjie Zhang; Ning Pan; Gang Sun; Tingrui Pan

The study of wearable devices has become a popular research topic recently, where high-sensitivity, noise proof sensing mechanisms with long-term wearability play critical roles in a real-world implementation, while the existing mechanical sensing technologies (i.e., resistive, capacitive, or piezoelectric) have yet offered a satisfactory solution to address them all. Here, we successfully introduced a flexible supercapacitive sensing modality to all-fabric materials for wearable pressure and force sensing using an elastic ionic-electronic interface. Notably, an electrospun ionic fabric utilizing nanofibrous structures offers an extraordinarily high pressure-to-capacitance sensitivity (114 nF kPa-1 ), which is at least 1000 times higher than any existing capacitive sensors and one order of magnitude higher than the previously reported ionic devices, with a pressure resolution of 2.4 Pa, achieving high levels of noise immunity and signal stability for wearable applications. In addition, its fabrication process is fully compatible with existing industrial manufacturing and can lead to cost-effective production for its utility in emerging wearable uses in a foreseeable future.


Advanced Materials | 2018

Imperceptible Epidermal–Iontronic Interface for Wearable Sensing

Zijie Zhu; Ruya Li; Tingrui Pan

Recent development of epidermal electronics provides an enabling means to continuous monitoring of physiological signals and close tracking of physical activities without affecting quality of life. Such devices require high sensitivity for low-magnitude signal detection, noise reduction for motion artifacts, imperceptible wearability with long-term comfortableness, and low-cost production for scalable manufacturing. However, the existing epidermal pressure sensing devices, usually involving complex multilayer structures, have not fully addressed the aforementioned challenges. Here, the first epidermal-iontronic interface (EII) is successfully introduced incorporating both single-sided iontronic devices and the skin itself as the pressure sensing architectures, allowing an ultrathin, flexible, and imperceptible packaging with conformal epidermal contact. Notably, utilizing skin as part of the EII sensor, high pressure sensitivity and high signal-to-noise ratios are achieved, along with ultralow motion artifacts for both internal (body) and external (environmental) mechanical stimuli. Monitoring of various vital signals, such as blood pressure waveforms, respiration waveforms, muscle activities and artificial tactile sensation, is successfully demonstrated, implicating a broad applicability of the EII devices for emerging wearable applications.


international conference on solid state sensors actuators and microsystems | 2017

Electrospun nanofabric based all-fabric iontronic pressure sensor

Ruya Li; Yang Si; Zijie Zhu; Yaojun Guo; Yingjie Zhang; Ning Pan; Gang Sun; Tingrui Pan

The study of wearable devices has become a popular research topic recently, where high-sensitivity, noise proof sensing mechanisms with long-term wearability play critical roles in a real-world implementation. Here, we introduced a flexible supercapacitive sensing modality to all-fabric materials for wearable pressure and force sensing using an elastic ionic-electronic interface. Notably, an electrospun ionic fabric utilizing nanofibrous structures offers an extraordinarily high pressure-to-capacitance sensitivity (114 nF·kPa−1), which is at least 1,000 times higher than any existing capacitive sensors and one order of magnitude higher than the previously reported ionic devices, with a pressure resolution of 2.4 Pa, achieving high levels of noise immunity and signal stability for wearable applications.


Advanced Functional Materials | 2014

Microflotronics: A Flexible, Transparent, Pressure-Sensitive Microfluidic Film

Ruya Li; Baoqing Nie; Philip Digiglio; Tingrui Pan


Lab on a Chip | 2018

Wearable sensors: Modalities, challenges, and prospects

Jason Heikenfeld; Andrew Jajack; John A. Rogers; Philipp Gutruf; Lei Tian; Tingrui Pan; Ruya Li; Michelle Khine; Joshua Kim; Joseph Wang


Lab on a Chip | 2014

Microfluidic tactile sensors for three-dimensional contact force measurements.

Baoqing Nie; Ruya Li; James D. Brandt; Tingrui Pan


Lab on a Chip | 2017

Wearable microfluidics: fabric-based digital droplet flowmetry for perspiration analysis

Yahui Yang; Siyuan Xing; Zecong Fang; Ruya Li; Helen Koo; Tingrui Pan


Advanced Functional Materials | 2014

Flexible Electronics: Microflotronics: A Flexible, Transparent, Pressure‐Sensitive Microfluidic Film (Adv. Funct. Mater. 39/2014)

Ruya Li; Baoqing Nie; Philip Digiglio; Tingrui Pan

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Tingrui Pan

University of California

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Zijie Zhu

University of California

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Baoqing Nie

University of California

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Gang Sun

University of California

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Ning Pan

University of California

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Yang Si

University of California

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Yaojun Guo

University of California

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Yingjie Zhang

University of California

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