| Literature DB >> 25897592 |
Donghee Son1,2, Ja Hoon Koo1,3, Jun-Kyul Song1,2, Jaemin Kim1,2, Mincheol Lee1,3, Hyung Joon Shim1,2, Minjoon Park1,2, Minbaek Lee4, Ji Hoon Kim5, Dae-Hyeong Kim1,2,3.
Abstract
Electronics for wearable applications require soft, flexible, and stretchable materials and designs to overcome the mechanical mismatch between the human body and devices. A key requirement for such wearable electronics is reliable operation with high performance and robustness during various deformations induced by motions. Here, we present materials and device design strategies for the core elements of wearable electronics, such as transistors, charge-trap floating-gate memory units, and various logic gates, with stretchable form factors. The use of semiconducting carbon nanotube networks designed for integration with charge traps and ultrathin dielectric layers meets the performance requirements as well as reliability, proven by detailed material and electrical characterizations using statistics. Serpentine interconnections and neutral mechanical plane layouts further enhance the deformability required for skin-based systems. Repetitive stretching tests and studies in mechanics corroborate the validity of the current approaches.Entities:
Keywords: carbon nanotubes; charge-trap floating-gate memory; logic gates; stretchable electronics; wearable electronics
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25897592 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b01848
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881