3D printing adds new twist to stretchable electronics

Article By : Missouri University of Science and Technology

Stretchable electronics needs to overcome "mismatches" between the flexible elastomer base and more brittle electronic conductors.

A 3D printing-like approach to manufacturing may help make stretchable electronics—electronic components that can be elongated or twisted—more prevalent, according to researchers at Missouri University of Science and Technology.

Writing in the January 2017 edition of the journal Micromachines, the researchers assess the current state of the emerging field of stretchable electronics, focusing on a type of conductor that can be built on or set into the surface of a polymer known as elastomer.

These conductors could one day replace the rigid, brittle circuit board that powers many of today’s electronic devices. They could be used, for example, as wearable sensors that adhere to the skin to monitor heart rate or brain activity, as sensors in clothing or as thin solar panels that could be plastered onto curved surfaces.

Key to the future of stretchable electronics is the surface, or substrate. Elastomer, as its name implies, is a flexible material with high elasticity, which means that it can be bent, stretched, buckled and twisted repeatedly with little impact on its performance.

One challenge facing this class of stretchable electronics involves “overcoming mismatches” between the flexible elastomer base and more brittle electronic conductors, the researchers explained.

“Unique designs and stretching mechanics have been proposed to harmonise the mismatches and integrate materials with widely different properties as one unique system,” wrote the research team led by Dr. Heng Pan, assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at Missouri S&T.

A relatively new manufacturing technique known as additive manufacturing may help resolve this issue, Pan said.

The researchers suggest that additive manufacturing could be used to “print” very thin layers of highly conductive materials onto an elastomer surface. “With the development of additive manufacturing, direct writing techniques are showing up as an alternative to the traditional subtractive patterning methods,” they wrote.

Subtractive approaches include photolithography, which is commonly used to manufacture semiconductors.

Pan and his colleagues see additive manufacturing as a relatively economical approach to creating these new devices. At Missouri S&T, they are testing an approach that Pan calls a “direct aerosol printing.” The process involves spraying a conductive material and integrating with a stretchable substrate to develop sensors that can be placed on skin.

“With the increase of complexity and resolution of devices, higher requirements for patterning techniques are expected,” they wrote. “Direct printing, as an additive manufacturing method, would satisfy such requirements and offer low cost and high speed in both prototyping and manufacturing. It might be a solution for cost-effective and scalable fabrication of stretchable electronics.”

Yet further challenges must be addressed before stretchable electronics become widely used as components in consumer electronics, medical devices or other fields, the researchers say. These challenges include the development of stretchable batteries that can store energy and the need to ensure that stretchable electronics and the malleable surfaces they’re built upon perform and age well together.

Nevertheless, Pan and his colleagues are optimistic for the future of stretchable electronics. They foresee a growth in the types of materials that could be used as efficient conductors of electricity and as flexible surfaces on which to build stretchable electronics.

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