Literature DB >> 29521501

Melding Vapor-Phase Organic Chemistry and Textile Manufacturing To Produce Wearable Electronics.

Trisha L Andrew1,2, Lushuai Zhang1, Nongyi Cheng3, Morgan Baima1, Jae Joon Kim1,4, Linden Allison1, Steven Hoxie1.   

Abstract

Body-mountable electronics and electronically active garments are the future of portable, interactive devices. However, wearable devices and electronic garments are demanding technology platforms because of the large, varied mechanical stresses to which they are routinely subjected, which can easily abrade or damage microelectronic components and electronic interconnects. Furthermore, aesthetics and tactile perception (or feel) can make or break a nascent wearable technology, irrespective of device metrics. The breathability and comfort of commercial fabrics is unmatched. There is strong motivation to use something that is already familiar, such as cotton/silk thread, fabrics, and clothes, and imperceptibly adapt it to a new technological application. (24) Especially for smart garments, the intrinsic breathability, comfort, and feel of familiar fabrics cannot be replicated by devices built on metalized synthetic fabrics or cladded, often-heavy designer fibers. We propose that the strongest strategy to create long-lasting and impactful electronic garments is to start with a mass-produced article of clothing, fabric, or thread/yarn and coat it with conjugated polymers to yield various textile circuit components. Commonly available, mass-produced fabrics, yarns/threads, and premade garments can in theory be transformed into a plethora of comfortably wearable electronic devices upon being coated with films of electronically active conjugated polymers. The definitive hurdle is that premade garments, threads, and fabrics have densely textured, three-dimensional surfaces that display roughness over a large range of length scales, from microns to millimeters. Tremendous variation in the surface morphology of conjugated-polymer-coated fibers and fabrics can be observed with different coating or processing conditions. In turn, the morphology of the conjugated polymer active layer determines the electrical performance and, most importantly, the device ruggedness and lifetime. Reactive vapor coating methods allow a conjugated polymer film to be directly formed on the surface of any premade garment, prewoven fabric, or fiber/yarn substrate without the need for specialized processing conditions, surface pretreatments, detergents, or fixing agents. This feature allows electronic coatings to be applied at the end of existing, high-throughput textile and garment manufacturing routines, irrespective of dye content or surface finish of the final textile. Furthermore, reactive vapor coating produces conductive materials without any insulating moieties and yields uniform and conformal films on fiber/fabric surfaces that are notably wash- and wear-stable and can withstand mechanically demanding textile manufacturing routines. These unique features mean that rugged and practical textile electronic devices can be created using sewing, weaving, or knitting procedures without compromising or otherwise affecting the surface electronic coating. In this Account, we highlight selected electronic fabrics and garments created by melding reactive vapor deposition with traditional textile manipulation processes, including electrically heated gloves that are lightweight, breathable, and sweat-resistant; surface-coated cotton, silk, and bast fiber threads capable of carrying large current densities and acting as sewable circuit interconnects; and surface-coated nylon threads woven together to form triboelectric textiles that can convert surface charge created during small body movements into usable and storable power.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29521501     DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.7b00604

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  5 in total

1.  E-textile based modular sEMG suit for large area level of effort analysis.

Authors:  Korine A Ohiri; Connor O Pyles; Leslie H Hamilton; Megan M Baker; Matthew T McGuire; Eric Q Nguyen; Luke E Osborn; Katelyn M Rossick; Emil G McDowell; Leah M Strohsnitter; Luke J Currano
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-06-10       Impact factor: 4.996

2.  Wash-stable, oxidation resistant conductive cotton electrodes for wearable electronics.

Authors:  Sompit Wanwong; Weradesh Sangkhun; S Zohreh Homayounfar; Kwang-Won Park; Trisha L Andrew
Journal:  RSC Adv       Date:  2019-03-20       Impact factor: 3.361

3.  Prototype of a Textronic Sensor Created with a Physical Vacuum Deposition Process for Staphylococcus aureus Detection.

Authors:  Ewa Korzeniewska; Artur Szczęsny; Piotr Lipiński; Tomasz Dróżdż; Paweł Kiełbasa; Anna Miernik
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2020-12-29       Impact factor: 3.576

Review 4.  Electrically Transduced Gas Sensors Based on Semiconducting Metal Oxide Nanowires.

Authors:  Ying Wang; Li Duan; Zhen Deng; Jianhui Liao
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2020-11-27       Impact factor: 3.576

Review 5.  Electronic textiles for energy, sensing, and communication.

Authors:  Kang Du; Rongzhou Lin; Lu Yin; John S Ho; Joseph Wang; Chwee Teck Lim
Journal:  iScience       Date:  2022-03-29
  5 in total

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