4.8 Article

Ionic Gel Paper with Long-Term Bendable Electrical Robustness for Use in Flexible Electroluminescent Devices

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 9, Issue 19, Pages 16466-16473

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.7b02433

Keywords

conductive paper; coating; ionic gel; flexible; electroluminescent

Funding

  1. State Key Laboratory of Pulp and Paper Engineering [2015TS01]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21404042, 81671780]
  3. Australian Research Council's Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DECRA) [DE140100541]
  4. Australian Research Council [DE140100541] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Conductive paper has low-cost, lightweight, sustainability, easy scale-up, and tailorable advantages, allowing for its promising potential in flexible electronics, such as bendable supercapacitors, solar cells, electromagnetic shields, and actuators. Ionic gels, exhibiting a lower Young's modulus together with facile manufacturing, can fully serve as the conductive component to prepare conductive paper. Herein we report a low-cost (similar to 1.3 dollars/m(2)), continuous, and high throughput (up to similar to 30 m/min) fabrication of reliable and long-term (stable for more than two months) conductive paper. As-prepared conductive paper shows a high electrical durability with negligible bending-recovering signal changes over 5000 cycles. Using this ionic gel paper (IGP) as a key component, we build a variety of proof-of-principle demonstrations to show the capacity of IGP in constructing flexible electroluminescent devices with diverse patterns, including a square, an alphabetic string, and a laughing face. Our methodology has the potential to open a new powerful route to fabricate bendable conductive paper for a myriad of applications in future flexible electronics.

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