Highly-integrated, miniaturized, stretchable electronic systems based on stacked multilayer network materials

  • Honglie Song
  • , Guoquan Luo
  • , Ziyao Ji
  • , Renheng Bo
  • , Zhaoguo Xue
  • , Dongjia Yan
  • , Fan Zhang
  • , Ke Bai
  • , Jianxing Liu
  • , Xu Cheng
  • , Wenbo Pang
  • , Zhangming Shen
  • , Yihui Zhang*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Elastic stretchability and function density represent two key figures of merits for stretchable inorganic electronics. Various design strategies have been reported to provide both high levels of stretchability and function density, but the function densities are mostly below 80%. While the stacked device layout can overcome this limitation, the soft elastomers used in previous studies could highly restrict the deformation of stretchable interconnects. Here, we introduce stacked multilayer network materials as a general platform to incorporate individual components and stretchable interconnects, without posing any essential constraint to their deformations. Quantitative analyses show a substantial enhancement (e.g., by ∼7.5 times) of elastic stretchability of serpentine interconnects as compared to that based on stacked soft elastomers. The proposed strategy allows demonstration of a miniaturized electronic system (11 mm by 10 mm), with a moderate elastic stretchability (∼20%) and an unprecedented areal coverage (∼110%), which can serve as compass display, somatosensory mouse, and physiological-signal monitor.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberabm3785
JournalScience Advances
Volume8
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2022
Externally publishedYes

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