| Literature DB >> 27185907 |
Jung Woo Lee1, Renxiao Xu2, Seungmin Lee3, Kyung-In Jang3, Yichen Yang3, Anthony Banks3, Ki Jun Yu3, Jeonghyun Kim1, Sheng Xu4, Siyi Ma3, Sung Woo Jang5, Phillip Won3, Yuhang Li6, Bong Hoon Kim3, Jo Young Choe3, Soojeong Huh7, Yong Ho Kwon3, Yonggang Huang8, Ungyu Paik9, John A Rogers10.
Abstract
Power supply represents a critical challenge in the development of body-integrated electronic technologies. Although recent research establishes an impressive variety of options in energy storage (batteries and supercapacitors) and generation (triboelectric, piezoelectric, thermoelectric, and photovoltaic devices), the modest electrical performance and/or the absence of soft, biocompatible mechanical properties limit their practical use. The results presented here form the basis of soft, skin-compatible means for efficient photovoltaic generation and high-capacity storage of electrical power using dual-junction, compound semiconductor solar cells and chip-scale, rechargeable lithium-ion batteries, respectively. Miniaturized components, deformable interconnects, optimized array layouts, and dual-composition elastomer substrates, superstrates, and encapsulation layers represent key features. Systematic studies of the materials and mechanics identify optimized designs, including unusual configurations that exploit a folded, multilayer construct to improve the functional density without adversely affecting the soft, stretchable characteristics. System-level examples exploit such technologies in fully wireless sensors for precision skin thermography, with capabilities in continuous data logging and local processing, validated through demonstrations on volunteer subjects in various realistic scenarios.Entities:
Keywords: energy management; multijunction solar cell; solid-state lithium-ion battery; stretchable electronics; wearable technology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27185907 PMCID: PMC4896718 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1605720113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205