University of California, Irvine researchers have invented a wearable, wireless, battery-free, bioelectronic sensor to monitor users' health by analyzing molecular biomarkers in human sweat.
UC Irvine researchers built a battery-free wearable sweat sensor that tracks multiple health biomarkers and self-regenerates.
University of California, Irvine researchers have invented a wearable, wireless, battery-free, bioelectronic sensor to ...
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Master your car’s O2 sensor diagnostics
Why it matters: O2 sensors feed critical data to your ECU, helping maintain the ideal air-fuel ratio for performance, efficiency, and emissions control. Reading the signals: Healthy upstream sensors ...
Unlike smoke alarms that may only sound once when I press the test button, or others that need the button to remain depressed ...
This design based on an SR latch and two RC networks is, unlike many alternative solutions, neither complex nor expensive. Single and differential capacitance sensors are widely used to measure linear ...
An electrochemical sensor developed at Oregon State University holds promise for making food quality testing faster, more accurate, more environmentally friendly, and less expensive. The novel sensor, ...
Cardiovascular diseases remain the leading cause of death worldwide, accounting for nearly 20 million deaths each year. Rapid diagnosis and risk assessment of cardiac injury are therefore essential ...
Previous reports have suggested that Apple is planning to fit a 200-megapixel camera to an iPhone in either 2027 or 2028. While squeezing ever more pixels into the same size sensor would be bad news ...
Abstract: This article presents a novel fault diagnosis method for open-circuit faults of insulated gate bipolar transistors (IGBTs) and current sensor faults in three-phase sinusoidal pulsewidth ...
“The Federal Circuit [said] that the ITC permissibly treated the Masimo Watch as the domestic industry article and reasonably viewed the prototype units as physical articles practicing the asserted ...
The more snow, the better for Teradar, a Boston startup that’s building new technology for military and civilian vehicles. The company’s still-in-development sensor can “see” objects and pedestrians ...
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