Shuang WuShanshan YaoYuxuan LiuXiaogang HuHe HuangYong Zhu
Controlled buckling and delamination of thin films on a compliant substrate has attracted much attention for applications ranging from micro/nanofabrication to flexible and stretchable electronics to bioengineering. Here, a highly conductive and stretchable conductor is fabricated by attaching a polymer composite film (with a thin layer of silver nanowires embedded below the surface of the polymer matrix) on top of a prestretched elastomer substrate followed with releasing the prestrain. A partially delaminated wavy geometry of the polymer film is created. During the evolution of the buckle-delamination, the blisters pop-up randomly but self-adjust into a uniform distribution, which effectively reduces the local strain in the silver nanowires. The resistance change of the conductor is less than 3% with the applied strain up to 100%. A theoretical model on the buckle-delamination structure is developed to predict the geometrical evolution, which agrees well with experimental observation. Finally, an integrated silver nanowire/elastomer sensing module and a stretchable thermochromic device are developed to demonstrate the utility of the stretchable conductor. This work highlights the important relevance of mechanics-based design in nanomaterial-enabled stretchable devices.
Shuang WuShanshan YaoYuxuan LiuXiaogang HuHe HuangYong Zhu
Xinning HoJu Nie TeyWenjun LiuChek Kweng ChengJun Wei
Chuanxin WengZhaohe DaiGuorui WangLuqi LiuZhong Zhang
Chaoyi YanXu WangMengqi CuiJiangxin WangWenbin KangCe Yao FooPooi See Lee