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Formulating and Manufacturing Low Profile Integrated Batteries for Wireless Sensing Labels

Reference Number
EP/R02331X/1
Title
Formulating and Manufacturing Low Profile Integrated Batteries for Wireless Sensing Labels
Status
Completed
Energy Categories
Energy Efficiency(Residential and commercial)
Not Energy Related
Other Power and Storage Technologies(Energy storage)
Research Types
Basic and strategic applied research
Science and Technology Fields
PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Chemistry)
PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Physics)
ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY (Electrical and Electronic Engineering)
UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation
Not Cross-cutting
Principal Investigator
Professor J Batchelor
Electronics
University of Kent
Award Type
Standard
Funding Source
EPSRC
Start Date
01 May 2018
End Date
30 April 2022
Duration
48 months
Total Grant Value
£1,289,916
Industrial Sectors
Manufacturing
Region
South East
Programme
Manufacturing : Manufacturing
Investigators
Principal Investigator
Professor J Batchelor, Electronics, University of Kent
Other Investigator
Dr LM Alfredsson, Sch of Physical Sciences, University of Kent
Professor SG Yeates, Chemistry, University of Manchester
Industrial Collaborator
Project Contact, Givaudan International SA, Switzerland
Project Contact, Pragmatic Semiconductor Limited
Project Contact, TROZON X Ltd
Project Contact, DSTL - Defence Science and Technology Laboratory
Web Site
Objectives
Abstract
We seek to create conformal sensors unlike existing electronics that exploit the ultra-thin form factor achieved by additive manufacture to offer flexible labels with sensing, wireless communication and energy harvesting to charge entirely integrated batteries. To achieve this, we must re-engineer antennas and batteries (the largest devices in wireless systems and which suffer poor efficiency from close integration). Our battery-assisted labels will be printed using sustainable inks with reclaimable materials for the circular economy. They will communicate at distances greater than passive alternatives and enable 'on object' or 'on-skin' monitoring, e.g. of atmospheric vapours or medical testing. Successful outcomes will provide unprecedented data from attach-and-forget smart labels that can be customised by overprinting with different sensing films. To achieve this our team of leading Wireless, Battery Formulation, and Digital Manufacturing researchers, will combine with the UK National Catapult for Printed Electrics.Previous battery-free (passive) UHF RFID based tag sensors proposed for smart connected ecosystems are inherently limited in their functionality (e.g. no data logging or analog to digital interface) and the communication range is a few metres or less. This limitation arises through the need to harvest sufficient power. A battery would overcome the range and functionality limitations, but at the cost of overall bulk due to battery volume, including holder size , and the physical separation needed between the conducting battery casing and the antenna in order to maintain radiation efficiency. Also, there are serious implications for the end of life of millions of pervasive sensing labels containing the materials commonly used in battery formulation. With these constraints and the expectation of interconnecting separate components, it will never be possible to produce truly thin label-like power-assisted electronics.The labels we propose will be inherently low energy in operation, but integrated battery assistance will make possible many potential applications including bio-sensing, pharma smart monitoring & patient compliance, security, industrial and domestic chemical, temperature, & power monitoring, and enable encryption in emerging big data nodes for Smart Connected Systems. To ensure deliverable outputs in this work, we will focus on creating proof of concept vapour sensing tags to address two identified needs.1. We will develop labels to sense air pollution which is well known to reduce quality of life and attacks infrastructure through acid rain.2. We will create atmospheric sensing labels for industrial processes and product testing as identified by our partner Givaudan. The team of RFID engineers, functional materials scientists, inkjet experts and the national Catapult for printed electronics will engineer efficient antennas on battery substrates, demonstrate ultrathin battery chemistries, suitable foradditive manufacture that offer performance similar to commercial coin cells, create inks to print thin film Nitrogen Oxide sensors, create prototype sensing wireless labels by inkjet printing, and produce test runs of the devices using commercial roll-to-roll techniques. Our designs will be integrated into a demonstrator system that can read the tags and display results in an accessible way
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Added to Database
13/11/18