Hong Kong researchers create artificial skin that mimics bruising by turning ...

Hong Kong researchers create artificial skin that mimics bruising by turning ...
Hong Kong researchers create artificial skin that mimics bruising by turning ...

Scientists in Hong Kong have developed artificial skin that bruises like the real thing.

The material, called I-skin, could be used on artificial limbs to alert users they have damaged their prosthetics.

It's embedded with a gel that turns from yellow to welt-like purple when subjected to physical stress.

Volunteers wearing strips of I-skin on their fingers, hands and knees repeatedly banged the appendage against a wall, proving the ‘bruise’ would appear if enough force was used. 

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Scientists in Hong Kong have developed an artificial skin that will mimic the purple discoloration of a bruise if hit hard enough

Volunteers wearing strips of I-skin on their fingers, hands and knees repeatedly banged the appendage against a wall, proving a ‘bruise’ would appear if enough force was used

Scientists in Hong Kong have developed an artificial skin that will mimic the discoloration of a bruise if hit hard enough. Volunteers wearing strips of I-skin on their fingers, hands and knees repeatedly banged the appendage against a wall, proving a ‘bruise’ would appear if enough force was used

'Artificial skins with sensing ability have great potential in applications of wearable devices and soft robotics,' researchers at the Chinese University of Hong Kong wrote in a new report published in the journal ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces.

To develop a material that mimicked human bruises, engineer Wenlian Qiu and her team developed an ionic hydrogel infused with spiropyran, a molecule that approximates the blue-purple shade of a bruise when subjected to 'a large deformation,' according to their report.

I-skin can be bent and stretched without discoloring, New Atlas reported, though this did affect its electrical signals.

But repeated or forceful hitting, pinching or pressing brings an eggplant hue to the surface, as evidenced in a recent video. 

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The ionic hydrogel in the I-skin (right) mimics the plum coloration of a real bruise for two to five hours before returning to its default yellow coloring

The discoloration remains visible for between two to five hours, the researchers said. 

In addition to prosthetics, the technology could also be used on wearable electronics or even robots, to indicate damage or simply make them more 'lifelike.'

Engineers are increasingly working on artificial epidermis that doesn't just simulate the look of real skin, but reacts like it, too—in use with prosthetic limbs and for robots expected to socialize with humans.

I-skin can be bent and stretched without discoloring. But hitting, pinching or pressing with sufficient force brings an eggplant hue to the surface

I-skin can be bent and stretched without discoloring. But hitting, pinching or pressing with sufficient force brings an eggplant hue to the surface

In September, scientists at RMIT University in Australia announced they had developed a material that can 'feel pain' in the same way as the real-life organ.   

Their breakthrough pseudo-skin, reported in the journal Advanced Intelligent Systems, replicates human nerves with electrical signals to trigger an immediate reaction. 

'Skin is our body's largest sensory organ, with complex features designed to send rapid-fire warning signals when anything hurts,' lead researcher Madhu Bhaskaran said in a statement.

'We're sensing things all the time through the skin but our pain response only kicks in at a certain point, like when we touch something too hot or too sharp.

'No electronic technologies have been able to realistically mimic that very human feeling of pain - until now.

'Our artificial skin reacts instantly when

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