Over-stretching tolerant conductors on rubber films by inkjet-printing silver nanoparticles for wearables

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Abstract

The necessity to place sensors far away from the processing unit in smart clothes or artificial skins for robots may require conductive wirings on stretchable materials at very low-cost. In this work, we present an easy method to produce wires using only commercially available materials. A consumer grade inkjet printer was used to print a wire of silver nanoparticles with a sheet resistance below 1 ω/sq. on a non-pre-strained sheet of elastic silicone. This wire was stretched more than 10,000 times and was still conductive afterwards. The viscoelastic behavior of the substrate results in a temporarily increased resistance that decreases to almost the original value. After over-stretching, the wire is conductive within less than a second. We analyze the swelling of the silicone due to the ink's solvent and the nanoparticle film on top by microscope and SEM images. Finally, a 60 mm long stretchable conductor was integrated onto wearables, and showed that it can bear strains of up to 300% and recover to a conductivity that allows the operation of an assembled LED assembled at only 1.8 V. These self-healing wires can serve as wiring and binary strain or pressure sensors in sportswear, compression underwear, and in robotic applications.

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APA

Albrecht, A., Bobinger, M., Salmerón, J. F., Becherer, M., Cheng, G., Lugli, P., & Rivadeneyra, A. (2018). Over-stretching tolerant conductors on rubber films by inkjet-printing silver nanoparticles for wearables. Polymers, 10(12). https://doi.org/10.3390/POLYM10121413

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