This page shows the details of why an item matched the keywords from your search.
One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to
Ray, Tyler
| Item Type | Name |
|
Concept
|
Sweat
|
|
Academic Article
|
Soft, skin-mounted microfluidic systems for measuring secretory fluidic pressures generated at the surface of the skin by eccrine sweat glands.
|
|
Academic Article
|
Super-Absorbent Polymer Valves and Colorimetric Chemistries for Time-Sequenced Discrete Sampling and Chloride Analysis of Sweat via Skin-Mounted Soft Microfluidics.
|
|
Academic Article
|
A fluorometric skin-interfaced microfluidic device and smartphone imaging module for in situ quantitative analysis of sweat chemistry.
|
|
Academic Article
|
Soft, Skin-Integrated Multifunctional Microfluidic Systems for Accurate Colorimetric Analysis of Sweat Biomarkers and Temperature.
|
|
Academic Article
|
Waterproof, electronics-enabled, epidermal microfluidic devices for sweat collection, biomarker analysis, and thermography in aquatic settings.
|
|
Academic Article
|
Battery-free, skin-interfaced microfluidic/electronic systems for simultaneous electrochemical, colorimetric, and volumetric analysis of sweat.
|
|
Academic Article
|
Soft, Skin-Interfaced Microfluidic Systems with Passive Galvanic Stopwatches for Precise Chronometric Sampling of Sweat.
|
|
Academic Article
|
Skin-interfaced soft microfluidic systems with modular and reusable electronics for in situ capacitive sensing of sweat loss, rate and conductivity.
|
|
Academic Article
|
Recent progress, challenges, and opportunities for wearable biochemical sensors for sweat analysis.
|
|
Academic Article
|
Soft, skin-interfaced sweat stickers for cystic fibrosis diagnosis and management.
|
|
Academic Article
|
State of Sweat: Emerging Wearable Systems for Real-Time, Noninvasive Sweat Sensing and Analytics.
|
|
Academic Article
|
Skin-interfaced microfluidic systems with spatially engineered 3D fluidics for sweat capture and analysis.
|
|
Academic Article
|
Recent Advances in Skin-Interfaced Wearable Sweat Sensors: Opportunities for Equitable Personalized Medicine and Global Health Diagnostics.
|