Traditional magnetic sensors (Hall, AMR, GMR, TMR, SQUID) are often rigid, power-hungry, expensive to manufacture, not sensitive enough for certain uses, or can’t be used in flexible or wearable devices. They struggle to meet the growing demand for flexible, low-cost, and energy-efficient sensors in wearables, IoT, and smart textiles.
The invention is a new kind of sensor that uses light to measure the strength of magnetic fields. It’s built with thin organic light-emitting and detecting layers to create a flexible, printable magnetic sensor that operates at room temperature with high sensitivity and low power consumption. When a magnetic field is present, it changes how the light behaves in the sensor, which helps measure the field’s strength. The design is compact, flexible, and can be made at low cost. It’s also sensitive enough to detect very small magnetic changes.
For companies creating smart, wearable, or compact sensing devices, this light-based thin film magnetic field sensor offers a more flexible, energy-efficient, and lower-cost alternative to traditional magnetic sensors — with high sensitivity and scalable manufacturing that others can’t match.