skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: Electrically Conductive Liquid Metal Composite Adhesives for Reversible Bonding of Soft Electronics
Abstract Conductive adhesives are required for the integration of dissimilar material components to create soft electronic and robotic systems. Here, a heterogeneous liquid metal‐based conductive adhesive is developed that reversibly attaches to diverse surfaces with high stretchability (>100% strain), low modulus (<100 kPa), and strain‐invariant electrical conductivity. This SofT integrated composite with tacK through liquid metal (STICK‐LM) adhesive consists of a heterogeneous graded film with a liquid metal‐rich side that is embossed at prescribed locations for electrical conductivity and an electrically insulating adhesive side for integration. Adhesion behavior is tuned for adhesion energies > 70 Jm2(≈ 25x enhancement over unmodified composites) and described with a viscoelastic analysis, providing design guidelines for controllable yet reversible adhesion in electrically conductive systems. The architecture of STICK‐LM adhesives provides anisotropic and heterogeneous electrical conductivity and enables direct integration into soft functional systems. This is demonstrated with deformable fuses for robotic joints, repositionable electronics that rapidly attach on curvilinear surfaces, and stretchable adhesive conductors with nearly constant electrical resistance. This study provides a methodology for electrically conductive, reversible adhesives for electrical and mechanical integration of multicomponent systems in emerging technologies.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
2238754
PAR ID:
10429668
Author(s) / Creator(s):
 ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  
Publisher / Repository:
Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Advanced Functional Materials
Volume:
34
Issue:
31
ISSN:
1616-301X
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. 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 3.25×105S m−1) without sintering or high temperature post‐processing, and strongly adhesive to various materials common to flexible and stretchable circuits (fracture energy 350 <Gc< 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. 
    more » « less
  2. Many soft robotic components require highly stretchable, electrically conductive materials for proper operation. Often these conductive materials are used as sensors or as heaters for thermally responsive materials. However, there is a scarcity of stretchable materials that can withstand the high strains typically experienced by soft robots, while maintaining the electrical properties necessary for Joule heating ( e.g. , uniform conductivity). In this work, we present a silicone composite containing both liquid and solid inclusions that can maintain a uniform conductivity while experiencing 200% linear strains. This composite can be cast in thin sheets enabling it to be wrapped around thermally responsive soft materials that increase their volume or stretchability when heated. We show how this material opens up possibilities for electrically controllable shape changing soft robotic actuators, as well as all-silicone actuation systems powered only by electrical stimulus. Additionally, we show that this stretchable composite can be used as an electrode material in other applications, including a strain sensor with a linear response up to 200% strain and near-zero signal noise. 
    more » « less
  3. A strain-induced electrically conductive liquid metal emulsion for the programmable assembly of soft conductive composites is reported. This emulsion exhibits the shear yielding and shear thinning rheology required for direct ink writing. Examples of complex self-supported 3D printed structures with spanning features are presented to demonstrate the 3D printability of this emulsion. Stretchable liquid metal composites are fabricated by integrating this emulsion into a multi-material printing process with a 3D printable elastomer. The as-printed composites exhibit a low electrical conductivity but can be transformed into highly conductive composites by a single axial strain at low stresses ([Formula: see text] 0.3 MPa), an order of magnitude lower than other mechanical sintering approaches. The effects of axial strain and cyclic loading on the electrical conductivities of these composites are characterized. The electrical conductivity increases with activation strain, with a maximum observed relaxed conductivity of 8.61 × 105S⋅m−1, more than 300% higher than other mechanical sintering approaches. The electrical conductivity of these composites reaches a steady state for each strain after one cycle, remaining stable with low variation ([Formula: see text] standard deviation) over 1000 cycles. The strain sensitivities of these composites are quantitatively analyzed. All samples exhibit strain sensitivities that are lower than a bulk conductor throughout all strains. The printed composites showed low hysteresis at high strains, and high hysteresis at low strains, which may be influenced by the emulsion internal structure. The utility of these composites is shown by employing them as wiring into a single fabrication process for a stretchable array of LEDs. 
    more » « less
  4. Abstract Thermal management in electric vehicles, electronics, and robotics requires the systematic ability to dissipate and direct the flow of heat. Thermally conductive soft composites are promising for thermal management due to their high thermal conductivity and mechanical flexibility. However, composites typically have the same microstructure throughout a film, which limits directional and spatial control of thermal management in emerging systems that have distributed heat loads. Herein, directional and spatially tunable thermal properties are programmed into liquid metal (LM) soft composites through a direct ink writing (DIW) process. Through the local control of LM droplet aspect ratio and orientation this programmable LM microstructure has a thermal conductivity in the direction of LM elongation of 9.9 W m−1·K−1, which is ∼40 times higher than the unfilled elastomer (0.24 W m−1·K−1). The DIW process enables LM droplets to be oriented in specific directions with tunable aspect ratios at different locations throughout a continuous film. This introduces anisotropic and heterogeneous thermal conductivity in compliant films to control the direction and magnitude of heat transfer. This methodology and resulting materials can provide designed thermal management solutions for rigid and soft devices. 
    more » « less
  5. Abstract Electronic devices are ubiquitous in modern society, yet their poor recycling rates contribute to substantial economic losses and worsening environmental impacts from electronic waste (E‐waste) disposal. Here, recyclable and healable electronics are reported through a vitrimer‐liquid metal (LM) microdroplet composite. These electrically conductive, yet plastic‐like composites display mechanical qualities of rigid thermosets and recyclability through a dynamic covalent polymer network. The composite exhibits a high glass transition temperature, good solvent resistance, high electrical conductivity, and recyclability. The vitrimer synthesis proceeds without the need for a catalyst or a high curing temperature, which enables facile fabrication of the composite materials. The as‐synthesized vitrimer exhibits a fast relaxation time with reconfigurability and shape memory. The electrically conductive composite exhibits high electrical conductivity with LM volume loading as low as 5 vol.%. This enables the fabrication of fully vitrimer‐based circuit boards consisting of sensors and indicator LEDs integrated with LM‐vitrimer conductive wiring. Electrical self‐healing and thermally triggered material healing are further demonstrated with the composites. The vitrimer and LM‐composite provide a pathway toward fully recyclable, mechanically robust, and reconfigurable electronics, thus advancing the field of electronic materials. 
    more » « less