Highly Stretchable Room-Temperature Self-Healing Conductors Based on Wrinkled Graphene Films for Flexible Electronics

Flexible conductors are emerging soft materials for diverse electrical applications. However, it still remains a great challenge to fabricate high-performance soft conductors that are highly conductive, largely stretchable, and rapid room-temperature self-healable. Here, we design and fabricate flex...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS applied materials & interfaces 2019-03, Vol.11 (11), p.10736-10744
Hauptverfasser: Yan, Shuang, Zhang, Gongzheng, Jiang, Haoyang, Li, Feibo, Zhang, Li, Xia, Yanhong, Wang, Zhaoshuo, Wu, Yukai, Li, Huanjun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Flexible conductors are emerging soft materials for diverse electrical applications. However, it still remains a great challenge to fabricate high-performance soft conductors that are highly conductive, largely stretchable, and rapid room-temperature self-healable. Here, we design and fabricate flexible conductive bilayer composite films composed of healable elastomeric substrates and wrinkled graphenes. The elastomeric substrates, obtained by a facile bulk copolymerization of N-isopropylacrylamide and 2-methoxyethyl acrylate, show fast room-temperature self-healing efficiency of up to 96%, imparted by the reversible hydrogen bonds. Importantly, the substrates also display strong interfacial adhesion crucial to the formation of stable bilayer composite films based on a prestrain route. The synergy between self-healing of the substrates and wrinkled structures of graphene is endowed to the composite films for mechanical and electrical healing. By adjusting the prestrain ratio of the substrates, the composite films could display the tunable stretchability, conductivity, and self-healing. The optimal bilayer composite film exhibits a high conductivity of 126 S cm–1, a large stretchability of 300%, and rapid room-temperature self-healing. Moreover, it is demonstrated that the composite films are strain-sensitive and can be used as strain sensors to monitor stretching deformation and human motion. These prominent demonstrations suggest a great potential of the bilayer composite films in next-generation wearable electronics.
ISSN:1944-8244
1944-8252
DOI:10.1021/acsami.9b00274