An Ultrastretchable and Self-Healable Nanocomposite Conductor Enabled by Autonomously Percolative Electrical Pathways

  • Sun Hong Kim
  • , Hyunseon Seo
  • , Jiheong Kang
  • , Jaeyoung Hong
  • , Duhwan Seong
  • , Han Jin Kim
  • , Jaemin Kim
  • , Jaewan Mun
  • , Inchan Youn
  • , Jinseok Kim
  • , Yu Chan Kim
  • , Hyun Kwang Seok
  • , Changhee Lee
  • , Jeffrey B.H. Tok
  • , Zhenan Bao
  • , Donghee Son

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

129 Scopus citations

Abstract

Both self-healable conductors and stretchable conductors have been previously reported. However, it is still difficult to simultaneously achieve high stretchability, high conductivity, and self-healability. Here, we observed an intriguing phenomenon, termed electrical self-boosting, which enables reconstructing of electrically percolative pathways in an ultrastretchable and self-healable nanocomposite conductor (over 1700% strain). The autonomously reconstructed percolative pathways were directly verified by using microcomputed tomography and in situ scanning electron microscopy. The encapsulated nanocomposite conductor shows exceptional conductivity (average value: 2578 S cm1 highest value: 3086 S cm1) at 3500% tensile strain by virtue of efficient strain energy dissipation of the self-healing polymer and self-alignment and rearrangement of silver flakes surrounded by spontaneously formed silver nanoparticles and their self-assembly in the strained self-healing polymer matrix. In addition, the conductor maintains high conductivity and stretchability even after recovered from a complete cut. Besides, a design of double-layered conductor enabled by the self-bonding assembly allowed a conducting interface to be located on the neutral mechanical plane, showing extremely durable operations in a cyclic stretching test. Finally, we successfully demonstrated that electromyogram signals can be monitored by our self-healable interconnects. Such information was transmitted to a prosthetic robot to control various hand motions for robust interactive human-robot interfaces.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)6531-6539
Number of pages9
JournalACS Nano
Volume13
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - 25 Jun 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • electrical self-boosting
  • human-robot interfaces
  • Nanocomposite conductor
  • self-healability
  • ultrastretchability

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