Digid announces its nanoscale temperature and force sensors are ready for mass deployment

Digid has announced that its patented printed electronics fabrication technology has been fully qualified for volume production of temperature and force sensors as small as 1µm long.

Digid sensors are believed to be the world’s smallest – and are set to become even smaller: Digid’s technology roadmap forecasts future production of sensors that are just 10nm long.

This nanoscale sensing technology provides the key that will unlock the potential of multiple emerging markets, including physical AI and humanoid robots. In robotics, for instance, Moravec’s paradox – that robots struggle with tasks which humans find easy, such as handling a delicate wine glass – has persisted in part because robot hands lack the billions of nerve endings on a human finger.

Now Digid offers the opportunity for machines to mimic human sensory capabilities: its nanoscale printed sensors can be applied to surfaces such as a robot’s shell in arrays of up to 16 x 16 sensors.
Other applications for Digid sensors include:
Force sensing on the blade of a scalpel in robotic surgical equipment
Temperature sensing on the tip of a temperature probe used in minimally invasive surgery
Temperature sensors embedded inside battery cells, for safety and performance monitoring
Biosensors for detecting biological objects such as viruses, or the chemical markers of drugs in the bloodstream

Dr Konstantin Kloppstech, Chief Technology Officer of Digid, said: ‘With the start of mass production of Digid sensors, the opportunities to embed sensing on almost any surface or in almost any device have become limitless. Our sensor is so small that it cannot be seen with the naked eye. Now it is up to the imaginations of design engineers to dream of uses for sensing where sensing has never before been possible.’

For each design project, Digid supplies a custom sensor and sensor assembly backed by hardware and software integration support. The sensor provides either a voltage or resistance measurement output via an I2C interface. Digid signal processing software converts the raw measurement outputs to useful temperature or force data.

digid.com

About Smart Cities

This news story is brought to you by smartcitieselectronics.com, the specialist site dedicated to delivering information about what’s new in the Smart City Electronics industry, with daily news updates, new products and industry news. To stay up-to-date, register to receive our weekly newsletters and keep yourself informed on the latest technology news and new products from around the globe. Simply click this link to register here: Smart Cities Registration