Programmable and flexible wood-based origami electronics

Natural polymer substrates are gaining attention as substitutes for plastic substrates in electronics, aiming to combine high performance, intricate shape deformation, and environmental sustainability. Herein, natural wood veneer is converted into a transparent wood film (TWF) substrate. The combina...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2024-10, Vol.15 (1), p.9272-11, Article 9272
Hauptverfasser: Ma, Huashuo, Liu, Chaozheng, Yang, Zhi, Wu, Shuai, Jiao, Yue, Feng, Xinhao, Xu, Bo, Ou, Rongxian, Mei, Changtong, Xu, Zhaoyang, Lyu, Jianxiong, Xie, Yanjun, Fu, Qiliang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Natural polymer substrates are gaining attention as substitutes for plastic substrates in electronics, aiming to combine high performance, intricate shape deformation, and environmental sustainability. Herein, natural wood veneer is converted into a transparent wood film (TWF) substrate. The combination of 3D printing and origami technique is established to create programmable wood-based origami electronics, which exhibit superior flexibility with high tensile strength (393 MPa) due to the highly aligned cellulose fibers and the formation of numerous intermolecular hydrogen bonds between them. Moreover, the flexible TWF electronics exhibit editable multiplexed configurations and maintain stable conductivity. This is attributed to the strong adhesion between the cellulose-based ink and TWF substrate by non-covalent bonds. Benefiting from its anisotropic structure, the programmability of TWF electronics is achieved through sequentially folding into predesigned shapes. This design not only promotes environmental sustainability but also introduces its customizable shapes with potential applications in sensors, microfluidics, and wearable electronics. Wood-based electronics are typically constrained in their ability to undergo complex shape deformation. Here, authors integrate transparent wood film and cellulose-based conductive ink for flexible electronic origami devices that have been demonstrated as a proof-of-concept for human motion sensors.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-53708-1