Origami-inspired engineering techniques could help researchers develop stretchy conductors for flexible plasma-screen displays and, eventually, solar panels that can bend to follow sunlight, according to a new study.
Increasingly, researchers worldwide are developing flexible electronics, such as and solar panels, that could one day make their way into clothing and even human bodies. But in order to make parts such as wires and electrodes, the scientists need conductors that are just as flexible.
However, stretchy conductors are difficult to design; existing ones either do not stretch much or their conductivity plunges dramatically if they do, the researchers said. []
Now, for the first time, scientists have used a variation of origami, known as , to create stretchable conductors. Whereas conventional origami uses only folding to create structures, kirigamiuses both folding and cutting.
Normally, when materials get stretched, they can tear, reducing their and thus their ability to carry electricity from one place to another. Furthermore, it can be difficult to predict when and where rips will occur, making it challenging to know precisely how the materials' properties might change, the researchers said.
The kirigami cuts reduced the conductivity of the . However, when the conductors were stretched, their conductivity remained steady, said study co-author Sharon Glotzer, a computational scientist at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. "The cuts and folds result in the material no longer staying in just two dimensions, but popping out into the third dimension, which is what gives it these extraordinary mechanical properties," Glotzer told Live Science.
The first prototype of the kirigami-inspired stretchable conductor involved paper covered in carbon nanotubes—pipes of carbon that are only nanometers, or billionths of a meter, wide that possess remarkable electrical conductivity. The kirigami pattern used was relatively simple, with cuts resembling rows of dashes that opened up to resemble a cheese grater. []
The researchers then developed their concept further by creating microscopic kirigami from sheets of oxide, a material composed of atom-thick layers of carbon and oxygen. They sandwiched these graphene oxide sheets together with a flexible plastic, with up to 30 layers of each. Cuts just a few tenths of a millimeter long were made with the aid of lasers and plasmas.
The scientists detailed their findings online today (June 22) in the journal Nature Materials.
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