A Hierarchical Metal Nanowire Network Structure for Durable, Cost-Effective, Stretchable, and Breathable Electronics

  • Wooseong Jeong
  • , Seonmin Lee
  • , Seungsun Yoo
  • , Seoyeon Park
  • , Hyeokjoo Choi
  • , Jihoon Bae
  • , Yeokyung Lee
  • , Kyoohee Woo
  • , Ji Hyuk Choi
  • , Sungwon Lee

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

19 Scopus citations

Abstract

Polymer nanofiber-based porous structures (“breathable devices”) have been developed for breathable epidermal electrodes, piezoelectric nanogenerators, temperature sensors, and strain sensors, but their applications are limited because increasing the porosity reduces device robustness. Herein, we report an approach to produce ultradurable, cost-effective breathable electronics using a hierarchical metal nanowire network and an optimized photonic sintering process. Photonic sintering significantly reduces the sheet resistance (16.25 to 6.32 Ω sq–1) and is 40% more effective than conventional thermal annealing (sheet resistance: 12.99 Ω sq–1). The mechanical durability of the sintered (648.9 Ω sq–1) sample is notably improved compared to that of the untreated (disconnected) and annealed (19.1 kΩ sq–1) samples after 10,000 deformation cycles at 40% tensile strain. The sintered sample exhibits ∼29 times less change in electrical performance compared to the thermally annealed sample. This approach will lead to the development of affordable and ultradurable commercial breathable electronics.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)60425-60432
Number of pages8
JournalACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
Volume13
Issue number50
DOIs
StatePublished - 22 Dec 2021

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 American Chemical Society

Keywords

  • biometric device
  • breathable device
  • facile manufacturing
  • health monitoring
  • nanomesh electrode
  • photonic sintering

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