4.6 Article

Mechanically and electrically durable, stretchable electronic textiles for robust wearable electronics

Journal

RSC ADVANCES
Volume 11, Issue 36, Pages 22327-22333

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1ra03392a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Korean government (MSIT) [2020R1C1C1005567]
  2. Creative-Pioneering Researchers Program through Seoul National University
  3. Institute for Basic Science [IBS-R015-D1]
  4. National Research Foundation of Korea [2020R1C1C1005567] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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The development of a mechanically and electrically durable, stretchable electronic textile by controlled diffusion of tough self-healing stretchable inks and by incorporating kirigami-inspired design. The product maintains stable conductive pathways under harsh deformation, showing damage-resistant performance and high stretchability.
A monolithic integration of high-performance soft electronic modules into various fabric materials has enabled a paradigm shift in wearable textile electronics. However, the current textile electronics have struggled against fatigue under repetitive deformation due to the absence of materials and structural design strategies for imparting electrical and mechanical robustness to individual fibers. Here, we report a mechanically and electrically durable, stretchable electronic textile (MED-ET) enabled by a precisely controlled diffusion of tough self-healing stretchable inks into fibers and an adoption of the kirigami-inspired design. Remarkably, the conductive percolative pathways in the fabric of MED-ET even under a harshly deformed environment were stably maintained due to an electrical recovery phenomenon which originates from the spontaneous rearrangement of Ag flakes in the self-healing polymer matrix. Specifically, such a unique property enabled damage-resistant performance when repetitive deformation and scratch were applied. In addition, the kirigami-inspired design was capable of efficiently dissipating the accumulated stress in the conductive fabric during stretching, thereby providing high stretchability (a tensile strain of 300%) without any mechanical fracture or electrical malfunction. Finally, we successfully demonstrate various electronic textile applications such as stretchable micro-light-emitting diodes (Micro-LED), electromyogram (EMG) monitoring and all-fabric thermoelectric devices (F-TEG).

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