| Literature DB >> 31793286 |
Guo Ye1, Zizheng Song1, Tianhao Yu2, Qishuo Tan1, Yan Zhang1, Tinglei Chen1, Changcheng He1, Lihua Jin3, Nan Liu1,2.
Abstract
Stretchable conductors have been achieved by stacking conductive nanomaterials onto the surfaces of elastomeric substrates. However, many of them show a dramatic decrease in conductivity under strain without an efficient way for the conductive layer to release strain. Here, we report a transparent, stretchable, and self-healing conductor with excellent mechanoelectrical stability by introducing dynamic bonding between conductive nanomaterials and an elastomeric substrate. We prepare the conductor by semiembedding Ag nanowires (AgNWs) into a self-healing polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)-based elastomer, which is modified with bipyridine (Bpy) ligand and further cross-linked by adding Zn2+ as coordinator (Zn-Bpy-PDMS). The dynamic Ag-N bonds not only improve the wettability of the substrate and facilitate the spreading of AgNWs but also reversibly break and reform to accommodate the deformation of AgNWs. As a result, the resistance increase of Zn-Bpy-PDMS/AgNWs is much smaller than that without the dynamic bonding (PDMS/AgNWs). Besides, this conductor exhibits excellent conductivity (76.2 Ω/sq) and transparency (86.6% @ 550 nm), as well as extraordinary self-healing property with a low resistance increase (ΔR/R0 ∼ 1.4) after healing at room temperature for 1 day. This work provides insights into the future design of integrated electronic skin with transparency, stretchability, conductivity, and self-healing capability for applications in wearable optoelectronic devices.Entities:
Keywords: dynamic bond; electronic skin; self-healing; stretchable conductor; transparent
Year: 2019 PMID: 31793286 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.9b17354
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229