Tiny Wearable Device Warns of Exposure to UV Light

Northwestern Medicine and Northwestern’s McCormick School of Engineering scientists have developed what is being called the world’s smallest wearable, battery-free device to measure light. The technology enables scientists to measure exposure to light across multiple wavelengths. The device is as about as thick in diameter as a credit card and is about the size of an M&M. It is also solar powered. Researchers said the device monitored therapeutic UV light in clinical phototherapy booths for psoriasis and atopic dermatitis as well as blue light phototherapy for newborns with jaundice in the neonatal intensive care unit. It also demonstrated the ability to measure white light exposure for seasonal affective disorder. Researchers also noted the device enables precision phototherapy for these health conditions, and it can monitor, separately and accurately, UVB and UVA exposure for people at high risk for melanoma. For recreational users, the sensor can help warn of impending sunburn. The device works when light passes through a window in the sensor and strikes a millimeter-scale semiconductor photodetector. It then produces a minute electrical current with a magnitude proportional to the intensity of the light. Researchers said this current then passes to an electronic component called a capacitor where the associated charge is captured and stored. A communication chip embedded in the sensor reads the voltage across this capacitor and pass...
Source: MDDI - Category: Medical Devices Authors: Tags: Electronics Source Type: news