PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Development of an ultrasonic sensor capable of cuffless, non-invasive blood pressure measurement

KIMM–KIST jointly develop the world’s first skin-attachable PMN-PT ultrasonic sensor

2026-01-08
(Press-News.org) A new technology has been developed that enables cuffless non-invasive blood pressure monitoring by using ultrasonic to track real-time changes in vascular diameter—without the need for a traditional cuff. The technology is expected to serve as a core component in future wearable healthcare devices and smart medical monitoring platforms.

A research team led by Dr. Shin Hur at the Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials (KIMM, President Seog-Hyeon Ryu), including Syed Turab Haider Zaidi, a student researcher from the UST–KIMM School at KIMM, in collaboration with Dr. Byung-Chul Lee’s team at the Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST), has developed the world’s first skin-attachable, noninvasive blood pressure sensor using PMN-PT single-crystal piezoelectric composites integrated through a low-temperature soldering process.

*PMN-PT (Lead Magnesium Niobate–Lead Titanate) is a single-crystal piezoelectric material known for its exceptionally high electromechanical properties.

The team applied a dual-side SnBi (tin–bismuth) low-temperature solder bonding technique to integrate high-performance piezoelectric devices onto a flexible substrate without depolarization. They designed and fabricated a 5×4 array structure ultrasonic transducer array (UTA). The ultrasonic beam from this sensor penetrates the skin, detects signals reflected from the vessel walls, and measures changes in vessel diameter. Using this principle, it measures the real-time changes in blood vessel diameter corresponding to systolic and diastolic blood pressure and calculates blood pressure values. Built on a flexible polyimide (PI) substrate with a Parylene-C encapsulation layer, the sensor adheres securely to human skin and maintains a total thickness under 0.5 mm and a weight below 1 g, ensuring long-term wearability.

The sensor operates by transmitting ultrasound generated by PMN-PT single-crystal 1–3 composites into blood vessels, analyzing the reflected echoes to measure the vascular diameter and calculating blood pressure. To optimize acoustic propagation and reflection characteristics, the team conducted multi-physics simulations using COMSOL. The dual-side low-temperature soldering method (below 150 °C) prevents thermal depolarization commonly observed in lead-based piezoelectric devices, ensuring high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and strong electrical bonding reliability without requiring high-temperature processing.

Existing optical cuffless blood pressure measurement technology is susceptible to external environmental factors such as skin color, movement, and lighting. It also has limitations in that it can only measure blood vessels close to the skin surface, making it unable to measure blood pressure in deep blood vessels. In contrast, ultrasound-based blood pressure measurement technology can directly measure actual diameter changes in deep blood vessels beneath the skin. Traditional ultrasonic sensors made with rigid PZT materials also suffer from poor wearability, whereas the PMN-PT composite combined with low-temperature soldering enables conformal attachment to curved skin surfaces without performance loss. The simplified structure maintains excellent SNR without acoustic matching or backing layers, improving manufacturing efficiency. The sensor achieves high accuracy (within ±4 mmHg), flexible and skin-attachable performance, offering clear advantages over existing technologies.

The team validated the sensor using an artificial-skin vascular phantom. The measured systolic and diastolic blood pressures showed errors of ±4 mmHg and ±2.3 mmHg, respectively—meeting the AAMI clinical standard of ±5 mmHg. This represents one of the highest accuracy levels reported for noninvasive ultrasonic blood pressure monitoring.

“This technology is the first to demonstrate continuous, cuff-free blood pressure monitoring using a skin-attachable ultrasonic sensor,” said Dr. Shin Hur of KIMM. “Combined with AI-based blood pressure analysis, it will evolve into a core platform for personalized cardiovascular disease prediction and smart healthcare.”

The development of this non-invasive blood pressure sensor was carried out with support from the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources’ Materials and Components Technology Development Program (project: Development of Multi-Sensory Sensors for Service Robots). This research was published in January 2026 under the title “Skin-Conformal PMN-PT Ultrasonic Sensor for Cuffless Blood Pressure Sensing via Eutectic Solder Integration” in Microsystem & Nanoengineering, which ranks first in the Instruments & Instrumentation category (JCR 0.6%, Impact Factor 9.9, as of 2024).

Attachments:

Reference Material: Photo(Research Team led by Dr. Shin Hur)

###

The Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials (KIMM) is a non-profit government-funded research institute under the Ministry of Science and ICT. Since its foundation in 1976, KIMM is contributing to economic growth of the nation by performing R&D on key technologies in machinery and materials, conducting reliability test evaluation, and commercializing the developed products and technologies.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Longer treatment with medications for opioid use disorder is associated with greater probability of survival

2026-01-08
A new study of over 32,000 US Veterans has found that the longer people stay on medications for opioid use disorder (buprenorphine, methadone, or extended-release naltrexone), the greater the probability of short- and medium-term survival.  This benefit continues to increase at least for four years of ongoing treatment, considerably longer than most patients currently stay in treatment. People with opioid use disorder run the risk of dying from accidental overdose but opioid use disorder also increases the risk of death from other health conditions, most notably infectious ...

Strategy over morality can help conservation campaigns reduce ivory demand, research shows

2026-01-08
Research has shown that conservation campaigns could turn the tide on the illegal ivory trade if they focused less on themes of ‘guilt’ and more on why people want to buy ivory in the first place. Despite decades of awareness campaigns and trade bans, ivory buying in Asia still persists. At the recent 20th meeting of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) in Uzbekistan, the international ban on ivory trade was upheld.  Researchers at the University of York say many anti-ivory campaigns have struggled because they miss the human side of the problem - why ...

Rising temperatures reshape microbial carbon cycling during animal carcass decomposition in water

2026-01-08
Using metagenomic sequencing across a realistic temperature gradient, researchers show that carcass decay triggers a surge in carbon-degradation genes, while warming selectively favors pathways that rapidly consume easily degradable carbon. Animal death and decomposition are natural but powerful drivers of nutrient release. Each year, large quantities of animal carcasses enter terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, releasing carbon-rich fluids that alter water chemistry and microbial activity. Aquatic systems are especially important, accounting for more than half of global primary production and playing a central role in carbon fixation and degradation. ...

Achieving ultra-low-power explosive jumps via locust bio-hybrid muscle actuators

2026-01-08
Background Micro-jumping robots offer unique advantages in scenarios such as confined space exploration and post-disaster search and rescue. However, traditional designs have consistently faced two major bottlenecks. On one hand, actuators based on elastic energy storage mechanisms like springs struggle to accumulate sufficient energy for effective jumping when miniaturized, while their reset mechanisms incur additional energy losses. On the other hand, low-power actuators made from piezoelectric or dielectric materials reduce energy consumption but fail ...

Plant-derived phenolic acids revive the power of tetracycline against drug-resistant bacteria

2026-01-08
By boosting antibiotic uptake and disabling bacterial defense systems, these plant-derived molecules act as potent antibiotic adjuvants, restoring the efficacy of an aging but essential antibiotic and offering a promising strategy to combat resistant infections. As antibiotic resistance increasingly undermines long-standing treatments, extending the lifespan of existing drugs has emerged as a faster and more affordable alternative to developing new antibiotics. New antibiotic discovery typically requires over a decade and more than a billion dollars, while resistance can arise within only a few years, contributing to a sharp ...

Cooperation: A costly affair in bacterial social behaviour?

2026-01-08
Microbes often display cooperative behaviour in which individual cells put in work and sacrifice resources to collectively benefit the group. But sometimes, “cheater” cells in the group may reap the benefits of this cooperation without incurring any cost themselves. Scientists have suggested that in such cases, population bottlenecks – reduction in the total number of individuals – can help stabilise cooperative behaviour in the group. A new study in PLOS Biology reveals that population bottlenecks can fundamentally reshape how cooperation ...

Viruses in wastewater: Silent drivers of pollution removal and antibiotic resistance

2026-01-08
These findings suggest that current monitoring strategies, which rely heavily on bacterial indicators alone, may miss critical viral-driven risks and opportunities for safer wastewater reuse. Viruses are among the most abundant biological entities in engineered water systems, including wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). They interact intimately with microbial hosts, altering microbial metabolism, community structure, and ecological functions. In recent years, wastewater-based surveillance has gained attention for tracking pathogens and public health threats. However, most ...

Sub-iethal water disinfection may accelerate the spread of antibiotic resistance

2026-01-08
The study reveals that environmental stressors do not merely kill bacteria; they can also prime surviving cells to take up resistance genes more efficiently, raising concerns about how antibiotic-resistant bacteria may spread in aquatic environments. Antibiotic resistance genes and antibiotic-resistant bacteria are now recognized as emerging environmental contaminants, widely detected in rivers, lakes, wastewater, and even oceans. Aquatic systems provide ideal conditions for resistance genes to persist, interact, and spread among microorganisms. ...

Three in four new Australian moms struggle with body image

2026-01-08
Up to 75% of Australian women report concerns about their body image after giving birth, with many feeling intense pressure to “bounce back” to their pre-pregnancy shape, a pressure that can even trigger eating disorders for the first time, warn Flinders University researchers. A major review published in Body Image shows these struggles are not just personal - they are shaped by partners, families, and cultural expectations. The analysis of 36 studies found that social and interpersonal factors can either protect against or worsen body dissatisfaction and disordered eating ...

Post-stroke injection protects the brain in preclinical study

2026-01-08
‘Dancing molecules’ were delivered intravenously without surgery or direct injection into the brain Therapy significantly reduced brain damage and showed no signs of side effects Could one day complement existing stroke treatments by limiting secondary brain injury CHICAGO --- When a person suffers a stroke, physicians must restore blood flow to the brain as quickly as possible to save their life. But, ironically, that life-saving rush of blood can also trigger a second wave of damage — killing brain cells, fueling inflammation and increasing the odds of long-term disability. Now, Northwestern University scientists have developed an injectable regenerative ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Crystallographic engineering enables fast low‑temperature ion transport of TiNb2O7 for cold‑region lithium‑ion batteries

Ultrafast sulfur redox dynamics enabled by a PPy@N‑TiO2 Z‑scheme heterojunction photoelectrode for photo‑assisted lithium–sulfur batteries

Optimized biochar use could cut China’s cropland nitrous oxide emissions by up to half

Neural progesterone receptors link ovulation and sexual receptivity in medaka

A new Japanese study investigates how tariff policies influence long-run economic growth

Mental trauma succeeds 1 in 7 dog related injuries, claims data suggest

Breastfeeding may lower mums’ later life depression/anxiety risks for up to 10 years after pregnancy

Study finds more than a quarter of adults worldwide could benefit from GLP-1 medications for weight loss

Hobbies don’t just improve personal lives, they can boost workplace creativity too

Study shows federal safety metric inappropriately penalizes hospitals for lifesaving stroke procedures

Improving sleep isn’t enough: researchers highlight daytime function as key to assessing insomnia treatments

Rice Brain Institute awards first seed grants to jump-start collaborative brain health research

Personalizing cancer treatments significantly improve outcome success

UW researchers analyzed which anthologized writers and books get checked out the most from Seattle Public Library

Study finds food waste compost less effective than potting mix alone

UCLA receives $7.3 million for wide-ranging cannabis research

Why this little-known birth control option deserves more attention

Johns Hopkins-led team creates first map of nerve circuitry in bone, identifies key signals for bone repair

UC Irvine astronomers spot largest known stream of super-heated gas in the universe

Research shows how immune system reacts to pig kidney transplants in living patients

Dark stars could help solve three pressing puzzles of the high-redshift universe

Manganese gets its moment as a potential fuel cell catalyst

“Gifted word learner” dogs can pick up new words by overhearing their owners’ talk

More data, more sharing can help avoid misinterpreting “smoking gun” signals in topological physics

An illegal fentanyl supply shock may have contributed to a dramatic decline in deaths

Some dogs can learn new words by eavesdropping on their owners

Scientists trace facial gestures back to their source. before a smile appears, the brain has already decided

Is “Smoking Gun” evidence enough to prove scientific discovery?

Scientists find microbes enhance the benefits of trees by removing greenhouse gases

KAIST-Yonsei team identifies origin cells for malignant brain tumor common in young adults

[Press-News.org] Development of an ultrasonic sensor capable of cuffless, non-invasive blood pressure measurement
KIMM–KIST jointly develop the world’s first skin-attachable PMN-PT ultrasonic sensor