4.8 Article

Multimaterial Printing of Liquid Crystal Elastomers with Integrated Stretchable Electronics

期刊

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
卷 15, 期 20, 页码 24777-24787

出版社

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.2c23028

关键词

digital fabrication; 3D printing; 4D printing; liquid crystal elastomer (LCE); liquid metal; soft robotics

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This study presents a design and manufacturing methodology for combining direct ink write (DIW) 3D printing of soft, stretchable conductive inks with DIW-based 4D printing of LCE to create fully integrated, electrically responsive, shape programmable matter. The inclusion of conductive ink allows for stable power delivery to surface mount devices and Joule heating traces in a highly dynamic LCE system. This digital fabrication approach can push LCE actuators closer to becoming functional devices, such as shape programmable antennas and actuators with integrated sensing.
Liquid crystal elastomers (LCEs) have grown in popularity in recent years as a stimuli-responsive material for soft actuators and shape reconfigurable structures. To make these material systems electrically responsive, they must be integrated with soft conductive materials that match the compliance and deformability of the LCE. This study introduces a design and manufacturing methodology for combining direct ink write (DIW) 3D printing of soft, stretchable conductive inks with DIW-based 4D printing of LCE to create fully integrated, electrically responsive, shape programmable matter. The conductive ink is composed of a soft thermoplastic elastomer, a liquid metal alloy (eutectic gallium indium, EGaIn), and silver flakes, exhibiting both high stretchability and conductivity (order of 105 S m-1). Empirical tuning of the LCE printing parameters gives rise to a smooth surface (<10 mu m) for patterning the conductive ink with controlled trace dimensions. This multimaterial printing method is used to create shape reconfigurable LCE devices with on-demand circuit patterning that could otherwise not be easily fabricated through traditional means, such as an LCE bending actuator able to blink a Morse code signal and an LCE crawler with an on/off photoresistor controller. In contrast to existing fabrication methodologies, the inclusion of the conductive ink allows for stable power delivery to surface mount devices and Joule heating traces in a highly dynamic LCE system. This digital fabrication approach can be leveraged to push LCE actuators closer to becoming functional devices, such as shape programmable antennas and actuators with integrated sensing.

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