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      Recent advances in the construction and application of stretchable PEDOT smart electronic membranes

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          Abstract

          A comprehensive overview of stretchable PEDOT membranes for smart electronics, including stretchable structures, preparation strategies and recent applications.

          Abstract

          Conductive polymer poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT) has shown great potential for application in optoelectronic devices, sensors, and biomedicine. Flexible and stretchable PEDOT smart electronics have attracted great interest. Benefiting from the in-depth analysis of the structural properties of PEDOT and the development of fabrication techniques, many well-designed PEDOT composite membranes have been reported in the literature. In this paper, different structures of stretchable PEDOT membranes are reviewed, including wrinkled, cracked, fibrous, patterned, and micro–nano hierarchical structures. Top-down and bottom-up strategies for constructing stretchable PEDOT devices are reviewed, including blending, etching, deposition, templating, electrospinning/electrospraying, and various compositing methods. In addition, the applications of stretchable PEDOT membranes in smart electronics such as photovoltaics, light-emitting devices, organic thin-film transistors, sensors, thermal management, bioelectrodes, and wearable fabrics are reviewed. Future challenges for flexible and stretchable PEDOT membranes are proposed.

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          Is Open Access

          A highly stretchable, transparent, and conductive polymer

          A polymer is described that is conductive and stretchable, which can lead to electronics that can conform to the human body.
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            Highly stretchable resistive pressure sensors using a conductive elastomeric composite on a micropyramid array.

            A stretchable resistive pressure sensor is achieved by coating a compressible substrate with a highly stretchable electrode. The substrate contains an array of microscale pyramidal features, and the electrode comprises a polymer composite. When the pressure-induced geometrical change experienced by the electrode is maximized at 40% elongation, a sensitivity of 10.3 kPa(-1) is achieved.
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              Flexible high power-per-weight perovskite solar cells with chromium oxide-metal contacts for improved stability in air.

              Photovoltaic technology requires light-absorbing materials that are highly efficient, lightweight, low cost and stable during operation. Organolead halide perovskites constitute a highly promising class of materials, but suffer limited stability under ambient conditions without heavy and costly encapsulation. Here, we report ultrathin (3 μm), highly flexible perovskite solar cells with stabilized 12% efficiency and a power-per-weight as high as 23 W g(-1). To facilitate air-stable operation, we introduce a chromium oxide-chromium interlayer that effectively protects the metal top contacts from reactions with the perovskite. The use of a transparent polymer electrode treated with dimethylsulphoxide as the bottom layer allows the deposition-from solution at low temperature-of pinhole-free perovskite films at high yield on arbitrary substrates, including thin plastic foils. These ultra-lightweight solar cells are successfully used to power aviation models. Potential future applications include unmanned aerial vehicles-from airplanes to quadcopters and weather balloons-for environmental and industrial monitoring, rescue and emergency response, and tactical security applications.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                JMCCCX
                Journal of Materials Chemistry C
                J. Mater. Chem. C
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                2050-7526
                2050-7534
                November 09 2023
                2023
                : 11
                : 43
                : 14930-14967
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Materials and Chemistry, University of Shanghai for Science and Technology, Shanghai 200093, China
                Article
                10.1039/D3TC02295A
                c16ec10d-495b-482f-b9ef-6ccd37e1138c
                © 2023

                http://rsc.li/journals-terms-of-use

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