| Literature DB >> 29845674 |
Mahmoud Tavakoli1, Mohammad H Malakooti2, Hugo Paisana1, Yunsik Ohm2, Daniel Green Marques1, Pedro Alhais Lopes1, Ana P Piedade3, Anibal T de Almeida1, Carmel Majidi2.
Abstract
Coating inkjet-printed traces of silver nanoparticle (AgNP) ink with a thin layer of eutectic gallium indium (EGaIn) increases the electrical conductivity by six-orders of magnitude and significantly improves tolerance to tensile strain. This enhancement is achieved through a room-temperature "sintering" process in which the liquid-phase EGaIn alloy binds the AgNP particles (≈100 nm diameter) to form a continuous conductive trace. Ultrathin and hydrographically transferrable electronics are produced by printing traces with a composition of AgNP-Ga-In on a 5 µm-thick temporary tattoo paper. The printed circuit is flexible enough to remain functional when deformed and can support strains above 80% with modest electromechanical coupling (gauge factor ≈1). These mechanically robust thin-film circuits are well suited for transfer to highly curved and nondevelopable 3D surfaces as well as skin and other soft deformable substrates. In contrast to other stretchable tattoo-like electronics, the low-cost processing steps introduced here eliminate the need for cleanroom fabrication and instead requires only a commercial desktop printer. Most significantly, it enables functionalities like "electronic tattoos" and 3D hydrographic transfer that have not been previously reported with EGaIn or EGaIn-based biphasic electronics.Entities:
Keywords: conductive ink; epidermal electronics; hydrographic transfer; printed electronics; stretchable electronics
Year: 2018 PMID: 29845674 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201801852
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849