Self-powered pressure sensor based on zinc-nickel electrochemistry for warning and detection of Parkinson’s disease

Abstract

Self-powered pressure sensors based on electrochemical systems show promising potential for continuous health monitoring, yet face challenges in static response stability and miniaturized integration. Herein, a zinc-nickel electrochemical-based self-powered pressure sensor was developed for Parkinson’s disease (PD) symptom monitoring and “on-off phenomenon” warning. The sensor employs a Ni2O3/glycerol ink screen-printed on laser-induced graphene as the cathode, a Zn foil anode, and a KOH/polyvinyl alcohol hydrogel electrolyte prepared by an optimized immersion method, separated by a perforated polydimethylsiloxane buffer layer. This design achieves a sensitivity of 0.32 V/kPa (3-6 kPa), a broad detection range (0-10 kPa), rapid response/recovery times (95/80 ms), and exceptional durability (>4500 cycles with 0.2 V voltage decay). The sensor exhibits high biocompatibility (cell viability >93%, hemolysis rate <2%) and stable power output (1.2 V/cm2, 150 mW). Owing to its superior performance, the sensor is capable of classifying and evaluating fitness actions, as well as recognizing respiration patterns and gestures. Notably, a PD warning and detection system was developed using an Attention-Artificial Neural Network algorithm, achieving 95% accuracy in PD severity classification and a 100% success rate in identifying sudden motor fluctuations. This work provides a closed-structure electrochemical sensing strategy for wearable medical devices, demonstrating significant clinical value in personalized PD management.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Aug 2025
Accepted
07 Oct 2025
First published
14 Oct 2025

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2025, Accepted Manuscript

Self-powered pressure sensor based on zinc-nickel electrochemistry for warning and detection of Parkinson’s disease

Y. Hu, A. Wang, Z. Zhang, J. Xue, H. K. Sung, L. Chernogor, Y. Li, Z. Yao and Y. Li, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5TA06807J

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