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 Jm−2(≈ 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   
                    
                            
                            A Flexible and Electrically Conductive Liquid Metal Adhesive for Hybrid Electronic Integration
                        
                    
    
            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   
        
    
                            - Award ID(s):
- 2054409
- PAR ID:
- 10487249
- 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
- 
            
- 
            The development of soft electronics requires methods to connect flexible and stretchable circuits. With conventional rigid electronics, vias are typically used to electrically connect circuits with multilayered architectures, increasing device integration and functionality. However, creating vias using soft conductors leads to additional challenges. Here we show that soft vias and planar interconnects can be created through the directed stratification of liquid metal droplets with programmed photocuring. Abnormalities that occur at the edges of a mask during ultraviolet exposure are leveraged to create vertical stair-like architectures of liquid metal droplets within the photoresin. The liquid metal droplets in the uncured (liquid) resin rapidly settle, assemble and then are fully cured, forming electrically conductive soft vias at multiple locations throughout the circuit in a parallel and spatially tunable manner. Our three-dimensional selective stratification method can also form seamless connections with planar interconnects, for in-plane and through-plane electrical integration.more » « less
- 
            Abstract New deposition techniques for amorphous oxide semiconductors compatible with silicon back end of line manufacturing are needed for 3D monolithic integration of thin‐film electronics. Here, three atomic layer deposition (ALD) processes are compared for the fabrication of amorphous zinc tin oxide (ZTO) channels in bottom‐gate, top‐contact n‐channel transistors. As‐deposited ZTO films, made by ALD at 150–200 °C, exhibit semiconducting, enhancement‐mode behavior with electron mobility as high as 13 cm2V−1s−1, due to a low density of oxygen‐related defects. ZTO deposited at 200 °C using a hybrid thermal‐plasma ALD process with an optimal tin composition of 21%, post‐annealed at 400 °C, shows excellent performance with a record high mobility of 22.1 cm2V–1s–1and a subthreshold slope of 0.29 V dec–1. Increasing the deposition temperature and performing post‐deposition anneals at 300–500 °C lead to an increased density of the X‐ray amorphous ZTO film, improving its electrical properties. By optimizing the ZTO active layer thickness and using a high‐kgate insulator (ALD Al2O3), the transistor switching voltage is lowered, enabling electrical compatibility with silicon integrated circuits. This work opens the possibility of monolithic integration of ALD ZTO‐based thin‐film electronics with silicon integrated circuits or onto large‐area flexible substrates.more » « less
- 
            Abstract Gallium‐based liquid metal alloys (GaLMAs) have widespread applications ranging from soft electronics, energy devices, and catalysis. GaLMAs can be transformed into liquid metal emulsions (LMEs) to modify their rheology for facile patterning, processing, and material integration for GaLMA‐based device fabrication. One drawback of using LMEs is reduced electrical conductivity owing to the oxides that form on the surface of dispersed liquid metal droplets. LMEs thus need to be activated by coalescing liquid metal droplets into an electrically conductive network, which usually involves techniques that subject the LME to harsh conditions. This study presents a way to coalesce these droplets through a chemical reaction at mild temperatures (T∼ 80 °C). Chemical activation is enabled by adding halide compounds into the emulsion that chemically etch the oxide skin on the surface of dispersed droplets of eutectic gallium indium (eGaIn). LMEs synthesized with halide activators can achieve electrical conductivities close to bulk liquid metal (2.4 × 104S cm−1) after being heated. 3D printable chemically coalescing LME ink formulations are optimized by systematically exploring halide activator type and concentration, along with mixing conditions, while maximizing for electrical conductivity, shape retention, and compatibility with direct ink writing (DIW). The utility of this ink is demonstrated in a hybrid 3D printing process to create a battery‐integrated light emitting diode array, followed by a nondestructive low temperature heat activation that produces a functional device.more » « less
- 
            Solution-phase printing of exfoliated graphene flakes is emerging as a low-cost means to create flexible electronics for numerous applications. The electrical conductivity and electrochemical reactivity of printed graphene has been shown to improve with post-print processing methods such as thermal, photonic, and laser annealing. However, to date no reports have shown the manipulation of surface wettability via post-print processing of printed graphene. Herein, we demonstrate how the energy density of a direct-pulsed laser writing (DPLW) technique can be varied to tune the hydrophobicity and electrical conductivity of the inkjet-printed graphene (IPG). Experimental results demonstrate that the DPLW process can convert the IPG surface from one that is initially hydrophilic (contact angle ∼47.7°) and electrically resistive (sheet resistance ∼21 MΩ □ −1 ) to one that is superhydrophobic (CA ∼157.2°) and electrically conductive (sheet resistance ∼1.1 kΩ □ −1 ). Molecular dynamic (MD) simulations reveal that both the nanoscale graphene flake orientation and surface chemistry of the IPG after DPLW processing induce these changes in surface wettability. Moreover, DPLW can be performed with IPG printed on thermally and chemically sensitive substrates such as flexible paper and polymers. Hence, the developed, flexible IPG electrodes treated with DPLW could be useful for a wide range of applications such as self-cleaning, wearable, or washable electronics.more » « less
 An official website of the United States government
An official website of the United States government 
				
			 
					 
					
