Fractal design concepts for stretchable electronics

被引:0
作者
Jonathan A. Fan
Woon-Hong Yeo
Yewang Su
Yoshiaki Hattori
Woosik Lee
Sung-Young Jung
Yihui Zhang
Zhuangjian Liu
Huanyu Cheng
Leo Falgout
Mike Bajema
Todd Coleman
Dan Gregoire
Ryan J. Larsen
Yonggang Huang
John A. Rogers
机构
[1] University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,Department of Materials Science and Engineering
[2] Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology,Department of Mechanical and Nuclear Engineering
[3] Virginia Commonwealth University,Departments of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Mechanical Engineering
[4] Center for Engineering and Health,Department of Mechanical Engineering
[5] Skin Disease Research Center,Department of Bioengineering
[6] Northwestern University,undefined
[7] Center for Mechanics and Materials,undefined
[8] Tsinghua University,undefined
[9] Pohang University of Science and Technology,undefined
[10] Institute of High Performance Computing,undefined
[11] A*Star,undefined
[12] University of California,undefined
[13] San Diego,undefined
[14] HRL Laboratories,undefined
[15] LLC,undefined
来源
Nature Communications | / 5卷
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摘要
Stretchable electronics provide a foundation for applications that exceed the scope of conventional wafer and circuit board technologies due to their unique capacity to integrate with soft materials and curvilinear surfaces. The range of possibilities is predicated on the development of device architectures that simultaneously offer advanced electronic function and compliant mechanics. Here we report that thin films of hard electronic materials patterned in deterministic fractal motifs and bonded to elastomers enable unusual mechanics with important implications in stretchable device design. In particular, we demonstrate the utility of Peano, Greek cross, Vicsek and other fractal constructs to yield space-filling structures of electronic materials, including monocrystalline silicon, for electrophysiological sensors, precision monitors and actuators, and radio frequency antennas. These devices support conformal mounting on the skin and have unique properties such as invisibility under magnetic resonance imaging. The results suggest that fractal-based layouts represent important strategies for hard-soft materials integration.
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