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A molecular design approach towards elastic and multifunctional polymer electronics

Authors :
Zhitao Zhang
Jian-Cheng Lai
Shayla Nikzad
Wesley Michaels
Iain McCulloch
Yu Zheng
Zhenan Bao
Donglai Zhong
Weimin Zhang
Song Zhang
Christopher B. Cooper
Weichen Wang
Jiheong Kang
Nathaniel Prine
Deyu Liu
Xian Kong
Jaewan Mun
Gan Chen
Jian Qin
Zhiao Yu
Xiaodan Gu
Jeffrey B.-H. Tok
Source :
Nature Communications, vol 12, iss 1, Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2021), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Next-generation wearable electronics require enhanced mechanical robustness and device complexity. Besides previously reported softness and stretchability, desired merits for practical use include elasticity, solvent resistance, facile patternability and high charge carrier mobility. Here, we show a molecular design concept that simultaneously achieves all these targeted properties in both polymeric semiconductors and dielectrics, without compromising electrical performance. This is enabled by covalently-embedded in-situ rubber matrix (iRUM) formation through good mixing of iRUM precursors with polymer electronic materials, and finely-controlled composite film morphology built on azide crosslinking chemistry which leverages different reactivities with C–H and C=C bonds. The high covalent crosslinking density results in both superior elasticity and solvent resistance. When applied in stretchable transistors, the iRUM-semiconductor film retained its mobility after stretching to 100% strain, and exhibited record-high mobility retention of 1 cm2 V−1 s−1 after 1000 stretching-releasing cycles at 50% strain. The cycling life was stably extended to 5000 cycles, five times longer than all reported semiconductors. Furthermore, we fabricated elastic transistors via consecutively photo-patterning of the dielectric and semiconducting layers, demonstrating the potential of solution-processed multilayer device manufacturing. The iRUM represents a molecule-level design approach towards robust skin-inspired electronics.<br />Next-generation skin-inspired electronics require enhanced mechanical robustness and device complexity including elasticity, solvent resistance, and facile patternability. Here, the authors show a molecular design concept that simultaneously achieves all these requirements by covalently linking an in-situ formed rubber matrix with polymer electronic materials.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....aa021091c31ace2280eda19c24f800cf
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-25719-9