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      A Flexible and Electrically Conductive Liquid Metal Adhesive for Hybrid Electronic Integration

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          Abstract

          Electrical and mechanical integration approaches are essential for emerging hybrid electronics that must robustly bond rigid electrical components with flexible circuits and substrates. However, flexible polymeric substrates and circuits cannot withstand the high temperatures used in traditional electronic processing. This constraint requires new strategies to create flexible materials that simultaneously achieve high electrical conductivity, strong adhesion, and processibility at low temperature. Here, an electrically conductive adhesive is introduced that is flexible, electrically conductive (up to 3.25×10 5 S m −1) without sintering or high temperature post‐processing, and strongly adhesive to various materials common to flexible and stretchable circuits (fracture energy 350 < G c < 700 J m −2). This is achieved through a multiphase soft composite consisting of an elastomeric and adhesive epoxy network with dispersed liquid metal droplets that are bridged by silver flakes, which form a flexible and conductive percolated network. These inks can be processed through masked deposition and direct ink writing at room temperature. This enables soft conductive wiring and robust integration of rigid components onto flexible substrates to create hybrid electronics for emerging applications in soft electronics, soft robotics, and multifunctional systems.

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          Most cited references74

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          Autonomic healing of polymer composites.

          Structural polymers are susceptible to damage in the form of cracks, which form deep within the structure where detection is difficult and repair is almost impossible. Cracking leads to mechanical degradation of fibre-reinforced polymer composites; in microelectronic polymeric components it can also lead to electrical failure. Microcracking induced by thermal and mechanical fatigue is also a long-standing problem in polymer adhesives. Regardless of the application, once cracks have formed within polymeric materials, the integrity of the structure is significantly compromised. Experiments exploring the concept of self-repair have been previously reported, but the only successful crack-healing methods that have been reported so far require some form of manual intervention. Here we report a structural polymeric material with the ability to autonomically heal cracks. The material incorporates a microencapsulated healing agent that is released upon crack intrusion. Polymerization of the healing agent is then triggered by contact with an embedded catalyst, bonding the crack faces. Our fracture experiments yield as much as 75% recovery in toughness, and we expect that our approach will be applicable to other brittle materials systems (including ceramics and glasses).
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            Epidermal electronics.

            We report classes of electronic systems that achieve thicknesses, effective elastic moduli, bending stiffnesses, and areal mass densities matched to the epidermis. Unlike traditional wafer-based technologies, laminating such devices onto the skin leads to conformal contact and adequate adhesion based on van der Waals interactions alone, in a manner that is mechanically invisible to the user. We describe systems incorporating electrophysiological, temperature, and strain sensors, as well as transistors, light-emitting diodes, photodetectors, radio frequency inductors, capacitors, oscillators, and rectifying diodes. Solar cells and wireless coils provide options for power supply. We used this type of technology to measure electrical activity produced by the heart, brain, and skeletal muscles and show that the resulting data contain sufficient information for an unusual type of computer game controller.
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              The conflicts between strength and toughness.

              The attainment of both strength and toughness is a vital requirement for most structural materials; unfortunately these properties are generally mutually exclusive. Although the quest continues for stronger and harder materials, these have little to no use as bulk structural materials without appropriate fracture resistance. It is the lower-strength, and hence higher-toughness, materials that find use for most safety-critical applications where premature or, worse still, catastrophic fracture is unacceptable. For these reasons, the development of strong and tough (damage-tolerant) materials has traditionally been an exercise in compromise between hardness versus ductility. Drawing examples from metallic glasses, natural and biological materials, and structural and biomimetic ceramics, we examine some of the newer strategies in dealing with this conflict. Specifically, we focus on the interplay between the mechanisms that individually contribute to strength and toughness, noting that these phenomena can originate from very different lengthscales in a material's structural architecture. We show how these new and natural materials can defeat the conflict of strength versus toughness and achieve unprecedented levels of damage tolerance within their respective material classes.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Advanced Functional Materials
                Adv Funct Materials
                Wiley
                1616-301X
                1616-3028
                January 18 2024
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Mechanical Engineering Soft Materials and Structures Lab Virginia Tech Blacksburg VA 24061 USA
                [2 ] Macromolecules Innovation Institute Virginia Tech Blacksburg VA 24061 USA
                Article
                10.1002/adfm.202313567
                4fbb3806-fa1f-4eb4-9989-f777ceecd5ed
                © 2024

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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