Highly Stable and Stretchable Conductive Films through Thermal-Radiation-Assisted Metal Encapsulation.

Adv Mater

Innovative Centre for Flexible Devices (iFLEX), Max Planck-NTU Joint Lab for Artificial Senses, School of Materials Science and Engineering, Nanyang Technological University, 50 Nanyang Avenue, Singapore, 639798, Singapore.

Published: August 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Stretchable conductors are essential for flexible electronics like sensors and batteries, but their stability is often compromised due to mismatches between materials.
  • A new fabrication technique using thermal-radiation-assisted metal encapsulation creates a strong bond between gold and a polymer substrate, enhancing durability and allowing for high levels of stretchability and surface area.
  • The method has been successfully tested in real-world applications, such as monitoring muscle signals in animal models and detecting biosignals on human skin, indicating its potential for biomedical use.

Article Abstract

Stretchable conductors are the basic units of advanced flexible electronic devices, such as skin-like sensors, stretchable batteries and soft actuators. Current fabrication strategies are mainly focused on the stretchability of the conductor with less emphasis on the huge mismatch of the conductive material and polymeric substrate, which results in stability issues during long-term use. Thermal-radiation-assisted metal encapsulation is reported to construct an interlocking layer between polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) and gold by employing a semipolymerized PDMS substrate to encapsulate the gold clusters/atoms during thermal deposition. The stability of the stretchable conductor is significantly enhanced based on the interlocking effect of metal and polymer, with high interfacial adhesion (>2 MPa) and cyclic stability (>10 000 cycles). Also, the conductor exhibits superior properties such as high stretchability (>130%) and large active surface area (>5:1 effective surface area/geometrical area). It is noted that this method can be easily used to fabricate such a stretchable conductor in a wafer-scale format through a one-step process. As a proof of concept, both long-term implantation in an animal model to monitor intramuscular electric signals and on human skin for detection of biosignals are demonstrated. This design approach brings about a new perspective on the exploration of stretchable conductors for biomedical applications.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adma.201901360DOI Listing

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