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Dive into the research topics where Zhaoqian Xie is active.

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Featured researches published by Zhaoqian Xie.


Small | 2015

Epidermal electronics with advanced capabilities in near-field communication

Jeonghyun Kim; Anthony Banks; Huanyu Cheng; Zhaoqian Xie; Sheng Xu; Kyung In Jang; Jung Woo Lee; Zhuangjian Liu; Philipp Gutruf; Xian Huang; Pinghung Wei; Fei Liu; Kan Li; Mitul Dalal; Roozbeh Ghaffari; Xue Feng; Yonggang Huang; Sanjay Gupta; Ungyu Paik; John A. Rogers

Epidermal electronics with advanced capabilities in near field communications (NFC) are presented. The systems include stretchable coils and thinned NFC chips on thin, low modulus stretchable adhesives, to allow seamless, conformal contact with the skin and simultaneous capabilities for wireless interfaces to any standard, NFC-enabled smartphone, even under extreme deformation and after/during normal daily activities.


Science Advances | 2016

Battery-free, stretchable optoelectronic systems for wireless optical characterization of the skin

Jeonghyun Kim; Giovanni A. Salvatore; Hitoshi Araki; Antonio M. Chiarelli; Zhaoqian Xie; Anthony Banks; Xing Sheng; Yuhao Liu; Jung Woo Lee; Kyung In Jang; Seung Yun Heo; Kyoungyeon Cho; Hongying Luo; Benjamin Zimmerman; Joonhee Kim; Lingqing Yan; Xue Feng; Sheng Xu; Monica Fabiani; Gabriele Gratton; Yonggang Huang; Ungyu Paik; John A. Rogers

Stretchable, wireless health monitoring patches to evaluate heart rate, blood oximetry, UV exposure, and skin coloration. Recent advances in materials, mechanics, and electronic device design are rapidly establishing the foundations for health monitoring technologies that have “skin-like” properties, with options in chronic (weeks) integration with the epidermis. The resulting capabilities in physiological sensing greatly exceed those possible with conventional hard electronic systems, such as those found in wrist-mounted wearables, because of the intimate skin interface. However, most examples of such emerging classes of devices require batteries and/or hard-wired connections to enable operation. The work reported here introduces active optoelectronic systems that function without batteries and in an entirely wireless mode, with examples in thin, stretchable platforms designed for multiwavelength optical characterization of the skin. Magnetic inductive coupling and near-field communication (NFC) schemes deliver power to multicolored light-emitting diodes and extract digital data from integrated photodetectors in ways that are compatible with standard NFC-enabled platforms, such as smartphones and tablet computers. Examples in the monitoring of heart rate and temporal dynamics of arterial blood flow, in quantifying tissue oxygenation and ultraviolet dosimetry, and in performing four-color spectroscopic evaluation of the skin demonstrate the versatility of these concepts. The results have potential relevance in both hospital care and at-home diagnostics.


Advanced Functional Materials | 2017

Miniaturized Battery‐Free Wireless Systems for Wearable Pulse Oximetry

Jeonghyun Kim; Philipp Gutruf; Antonio M. Chiarelli; Seung Yun Heo; Kyoungyeon Cho; Zhaoqian Xie; Anthony Banks; Seungyoung Han; Kyung In Jang; Jung Woo Lee; Kyu Tae Lee; Xue Feng; Yonggang Huang; Monica Fabiani; Gabriele Gratton; Ungyu Paik; John A. Rogers

Development of unconventional technologies for wireless collection, storage and analysis of quantitative, clinically relevant information on physiological status is of growing interest. Soft, biocompatible systems are widely regarded as important because they facilitate mounting on external (e.g. skin) and internal (e.g. heart, brain) surfaces of the body. Ultra-miniaturized, lightweight and battery-free devices have the potential to establish complementary options in bio-integration, where chronic interfaces (i.e. months) are possible on hard surfaces such as the fingernails and the teeth, with negligible risk for irritation or discomfort. Here we report materials and device concepts for flexible platforms that incorporate advanced optoelectronic functionality for applications in wireless capture and transmission of photoplethysmograms, including quantitative information on blood oxygenation, heart rate and heart rate variability. Specifically, reflectance pulse oximetry in conjunction with near-field communication (NFC) capabilities enables operation in thin, miniaturized flexible devices. Studies of the material aspects associated with the body interface, together with investigations of the radio frequency characteristics, the optoelectronic data acquisition approaches and the analysis methods capture all of the relevant engineering considerations. Demonstrations of operation on various locations of the body and quantitative comparisons to clinical gold standards establish the versatility and the measurement accuracy of these systems, respectively.


Advanced Functional Materials | 2015

Miniaturized Flexible Electronic Systems with Wireless Power and Near-Field Communication Capabilities

Jeonghyun Kim; Anthony Banks; Zhaoqian Xie; Seung Yun Heo; Philipp Gutruf; Jung Woo Lee; Sheng Xu; Kyung In Jang; Fei Liu; Gregory Brown; Junghyun Choi; Joo Hyun Kim; Xue Feng; Yonggang Huang; Ungyu Paik; John A. Rogers

Advances in materials and device architectures for these systems will create opportunities for increasing the range of capabilities, expanding the modes of use, improving the robustness/reliability, reducing the size/weight, and lowering the cost. The cellular phone platform will likely remain a key element in the broader technology landscape, as in currently available wrist band and watch style devices that measure body processes and communicate data to the phone. [ 2,3 ] Recent research demonstrates much different types of integration strategies compared to those of these existing systems, in which the wearable devices take the form of temporary transfer tattoos. The result is greatly improved contact with the body and corresponding increases in the diversity and accuracy of information that can be collected from integrated sensors. [ 2,4,5 ] Here, an overarching goal is to engineer the physical properties, and in particular the elastic modulus and elastic stretchability, to match those of the epidermis, as a way to reduce irritation and discomfort at the skin interface and to improve the robustness of the bonding. [ 2,4,6 ]


Science Advances | 2016

Mechanical assembly of complex, 3D mesostructures from releasable multilayers of advanced materials

Zheng Yan; Fan Zhang; Fei Liu; Mengdi Han; Dapeng Ou; Yuhao Liu; Qing Lin; Xuelin Guo; Haoran Fu; Zhaoqian Xie; Mingye Gao; Yuming Huang; Jung Hwan Kim; Yitao Qiu; Kewang Nan; Jeonghyun Kim; Philipp Gutruf; Hongying Luo; An Zhao; Keh Chih Hwang; Yonggang Huang; Yihui Zhang; John A. Rogers

Buckling-driven assembly of 3D mesostructures from releasable multilayers offers versatile design options for unique applications. Capabilities for assembly of three-dimensional (3D) micro/nanostructures in advanced materials have important implications across a broad range of application areas, reaching nearly every class of microsystem technology. Approaches that rely on the controlled, compressive buckling of 2D precursors are promising because of their demonstrated compatibility with the most sophisticated planar technologies, where materials include inorganic semiconductors, polymers, metals, and various heterogeneous combinations, spanning length scales from submicrometer to centimeter dimensions. We introduce a set of fabrication techniques and design concepts that bypass certain constraints set by the underlying physics and geometrical properties of the assembly processes associated with the original versions of these methods. In particular, the use of releasable, multilayer 2D precursors provides access to complex 3D topologies, including dense architectures with nested layouts, controlled points of entanglement, and other previously unobtainable layouts. Furthermore, the simultaneous, coordinated assembly of additional structures can enhance the structural stability and drive the motion of extended features in these systems. The resulting 3D mesostructures, demonstrated in a diverse set of more than 40 different examples with feature sizes from micrometers to centimeters, offer unique possibilities in device design. A 3D spiral inductor for near-field communication represents an example where these ideas enable enhanced quality (Q) factors and broader working angles compared to those of conventional 2D counterparts.


Pain | 2017

Fully implantable, battery-free wireless optoelectronic devices for spinal optogenetics

Vijay K. Samineni; Jangyeol Yoon; Kaitlyn E. Crawford; Yu Ra Jeong; Kajanna C. McKenzie; Gunchul Shin; Zhaoqian Xie; Saranya S. Sundaram; Yuhang Li; Min Young Yang; Jeonghyun Kim; Di Wu; Yeguang Xue; Xue Feng; Yonggang Huang; Aaron D. Mickle; Anthony Banks; Jeong Sook Ha; Judith P. Golden; John A. Rogers; Robert W. Gereau

Abstract The advent of optogenetic tools has allowed unprecedented insights into the organization of neuronal networks. Although recently developed technologies have enabled implementation of optogenetics for studies of brain function in freely moving, untethered animals, wireless powering and device durability pose challenges in studies of spinal cord circuits where dynamic, multidimensional motions against hard and soft surrounding tissues can lead to device degradation. We demonstrate here a fully implantable optoelectronic device powered by near-field wireless communication technology, with a thin and flexible open architecture that provides excellent mechanical durability, robust sealing against biofluid penetration and fidelity in wireless activation, thereby allowing for long-term optical stimulation of the spinal cord without constraint on the natural behaviors of the animals. The system consists of a double-layer, rectangular-shaped magnetic coil antenna connected to a microscale inorganic light-emitting diode (&mgr;-ILED) on a thin, flexible probe that can be implanted just above the dura of the mouse spinal cord for effective stimulation of light-sensitive proteins expressed in neurons in the dorsal horn. Wireless optogenetic activation of TRPV1-ChR2 afferents with spinal &mgr;-ILEDs causes nocifensive behaviors and robust real-time place aversion with sustained operation in animals over periods of several weeks to months. The relatively low-cost electronics required for control of the systems, together with the biocompatibility and robust operation of these devices will allow broad application of optogenetics in future studies of spinal circuits, as well as various peripheral targets, in awake, freely moving and untethered animals, where existing approaches have limited utility.


Science Translational Medicine | 2018

Battery-free, wireless sensors for full-body pressure and temperature mapping

Seungyong Han; Jeonghyun Kim; Sang Min Won; Yinji Ma; Daeshik Kang; Zhaoqian Xie; Kyu Tae Lee; Ha Uk Chung; Anthony Banks; Seunghwan Min; Seung Yun Heo; Charles R. Davies; Jung Woo Lee; Chi Hwan Lee; Bong Hoon Kim; Kan Li; Yadong Zhou; Chen Wei; Xue Feng; Yonggang Huang; John A. Rogers

Battery-free, soft, skin-mounted wireless sensors enable continuous, full-body spatiotemporal mapping of pressure and temperature on human subjects. Feeling the heat under pressure Pressure ulcers, or bedsores, can develop at skin sites overlying bony areas of the body when a patient remains in one position for an extended period. These sores can be difficult to detect in their early stages. To begin to address this, Han et al. developed flexible, adherent sensors that measure skin temperature and pressure in real time. The small sensors use wireless power to communicate with external reader antennas. Data acquired from multiple sensors were used to create full-body pressure and temperature maps, which detected changes in pressure due to adjusting the angle of hospital bed incline and changes in skin temperature during sleep in human participants during proof-of-concept studies. Thin, soft, skin-like sensors capable of precise, continuous measurements of physiological health have broad potential relevance to clinical health care. Use of sensors distributed over a wide area for full-body, spatiotemporal mapping of physiological processes would be a considerable advance for this field. We introduce materials, device designs, wireless power delivery and communication strategies, and overall system architectures for skin-like, battery-free sensors of temperature and pressure that can be used across the entire body. Combined experimental and theoretical investigations of the sensor operation and the modes for wireless addressing define the key features of these systems. Studies with human subjects in clinical sleep laboratories and in adjustable hospital beds demonstrate functionality of the sensors, with potential implications for monitoring of circadian cycles and mitigating risks for pressure-induced skin ulcers.


ACS Nano | 2017

Dissolution of Monocrystalline Silicon Nanomembranes and Their Use as Encapsulation Layers and Electrical Interfaces in Water-Soluble Electronics

Yoon Kyeung Lee; Ki Jun Yu; Enming Song; Amir Barati Farimani; Flavia Vitale; Zhaoqian Xie; Younghee Yoon; Yerim Kim; Andrew G. Richardson; Haiwen Luan; Yixin Wu; Xu Xie; Timothy H. Lucas; Kaitlyn E. Crawford; Yongfeng Mei; Xue Feng; Yonggang Huang; Brian Litt; N. R. Aluru; Lan Yin; John A. Rogers

The chemistry that governs the dissolution of device-grade, monocrystalline silicon nanomembranes into benign end products by hydrolysis serves as the foundation for fully eco/biodegradable classes of high-performance electronics. This paper examines these processes in aqueous solutions with chemical compositions relevant to groundwater and biofluids. The results show that the presence of Si(OH)4 and proteins in these solutions can slow the rates of dissolution and that ion-specific effects associated with Ca2+ can significantly increase these rates. This information allows for effective use of silicon nanomembranes not only as active layers in eco/biodegradable electronics but also as water barriers capable of providing perfect encapsulation until their disappearance by dissolution. The time scales for this encapsulation can be controlled by introduction of dopants into the Si and by addition of oxide layers on the exposed surfaces.The former possibility also allows the doped silicon to serve as an electrical interface for measuring biopotentials, as demonstrated in fully bioresorbable platforms for in vivo neural recordings. This collection of findings is important for further engineering development of water-soluble classes of silicon electronics.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Kinetics and Chemistry of Hydrolysis of Ultrathin, Thermally Grown Layers of Silicon Oxide as Biofluid Barriers in Flexible Electronic Systems

Yoon Kyeung Lee; Ki Jun Yu; Yerim Kim; Younghee Yoon; Zhaoqian Xie; Enming Song; Haiwen Luan; Xue Feng; Yonggang Huang; John A. Rogers

Flexible electronic systems for bioimplants that offer long-term (multidecade) stability and safety in operation require thin, biocompatible layers that can prevent biofluid penetration. Recent work shows that ultrathin films of silicon dioxide thermally grown (TG-SiO2) on device-grade silicon wafers and then released as transferrable barriers offer a remarkable set of attributes in this context. This paper examines the chemical stability of these materials in aqueous solutions with different combinations of chemistries that are present in biofluids. Systematic measurements reveal the dependence of the dissolution rate of TG-SiO2 on concentrations of cations (Na+, K+, Mg2+, Ca2+) and anions (Cl-, HPO42-) at near-neutral pH. Certain results are consistent with previous studies on bulk samples of quartz and nanoparticles of amorphous silica; others reveal significant catalyzing effects associated with divalent cations at high pH and with specific anions at high ionic strength. In particular, Ca2+ and HPO42- greatly enhance and silicic acid greatly reduces the rates. These findings establish foundational data of relevance to predicting lifetimes of implantable devices that use TG-SiO2 as biofluid barriers, and of other classes of systems, such as environmental monitors, where encapsulation against water penetration is important.


Extreme Mechanics Letters | 2018

Advanced approaches for quantitative characterization of thermal transport properties in soft materials using thin, conformable resistive sensors

Kaitlyn E. Crawford; Yinji Ma; Siddharth Krishnan; Chen Wei; Daniel Capua; Yeguang Xue; Shuai Xu; Zhaoqian Xie; Sang Min Won; Limei Tian; Chad Webb; Yajing Li; Xue Feng; Yonggang Huang; John A. Rogers

Noninvasive methods for precise characterization of the thermal properties of soft biological tissues such as the skin can yield vital details about physiological health status including at critical intervals during recovery following skin injury. Here, we introduce quantitative measurement and characterization methods that allow rapid, accurate determination of the thermal conductivity of soft materials using thin, skin-like resistive sensor platforms. Systematic evaluations of skin at eight different locations and of six different synthetic skin-mimicking materials across sensor sizes, measurement times, and surface geometries (planar, highly curvilinear) validate simple scaling laws for data interpretation and parameter extraction. As an example of the possibilities, changes in the thermal properties of skin (volar forearm) can be monitored during recovery from exposure to ultraviolet radiation (sunburn) and to stressors associated with localized heating and cooling. More generally, the results described here facilitate rapid, non-invasive thermal measurements on broad classes of biological and non-biological soft materials.

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Kyung In Jang

Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science and Technology

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Sheng Xu

University of California

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Kan Li

Northwestern University

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Yeguang Xue

Northwestern University

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