4.8 Article

Stretchable, Transparent Electrodes as Wearable Heaters Using Nanotrough Networks of Metallic Glasses with Superior Mechanical Properties and Thermal Stability

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages 471-478

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b04134

Keywords

Metallic glasses; transparent electrodes; stretchable electronics; stretchable heaters; wearable electronics

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science, ICT & Future Planning
  2. Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy (MOTIE) of Korea through Basic Science Research Program of National Research Foundation [2013R1A2A2A01068542]
  3. Technology Innovation Program [10044410]
  4. ICT RD program [10041416]
  5. Nano.Material Technology Development Program [2015M3A7B4050308]
  6. Convergence Technology Development Program for Bionic Arm [NRF-2014M3C1B2048198]
  7. Pioneer Research Center Program [NRF-2014M3C1A3001208]
  8. Development Program of Interconnection System and Process for Flexible Three Dimensional Heterogeneous Devices [10052675]
  9. Development Program of Manufacturing Technology for Flexible Electronics with High Performance - Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials [SC0970]
  10. Development Program of Internet of Nature System - UNIST [1.150090.01]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Mechanical robustness, electrical and chemical reliabilities of devices against large deformations such as bending and stretching have become the key metrics for rapidly emerging wearable electronics. Metallic glasses (MGs) have high elastic limit, electrical conductivity, and corrosion resistance, which can be promising for applications in wearable electronics. However, their applications in wearable electronics or transparent electrodes have not been extensively explored so far. Here, we demonstrate stretchable and transparent electrodes using CuZr MGs in the form of nanotrough networks. MG nanotroughs are prepared by electrospinning and cosputtering process, and they can be transferred to various desired substrates, including stretchable elastomeric substrates. The resulting MG nanotrough network is first utilized as a stretchable transparent electrode, presenting outstanding optoelectronic (sheet resistance of 3.8 Omega/sq at transmittance of 90%) and mechanical robustness (resistance change less than 30% up to a tensile strain of 70%) as well as excellent chemical stability against hot and humid environments (negligible degradation in performance for 240 h in 85% relative humidity and 85 degrees C). A stretchable and transparent heater based on the MG nanotrough network is also demonstrated with a wide operating temperature range (up to 180 degrees C) and excellent stretchability (up to 70% in the strain). The excellent mechanical robustness of these stretchable transparent electrode and heater is ascribed to the structural configuration (i.e., a nanotrough network) and inherent high elastic limit of MGs, as supported by experimental results and numerical analysis. We demonstrate their real-time operations on human skin as a wearable, transparent thermotherapy patch controlled wirelessly using a smartphone as well as a transparent defroster for an automobile side-view mirror, suggesting a promising strategy toward next-generation wearable electronics or automobile applications.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available