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Printable elastic conductors by in situ formation of silver nanoparticles from silver flakes.

Naoji MatsuhisaDaishi InouePeter ZalarHanbit JinYorishige MatsubaAkira ItohTomoyuki YokotaDaisuke HashizumeTakao Someya
Published in: Nature materials (2017)
Printable elastic conductors promise large-area stretchable sensor/actuator networks for healthcare, wearables and robotics. Elastomers with metal nanoparticles are one of the best approaches to achieve high performance, but large-area utilization is limited by difficulties in their processability. Here we report a printable elastic conductor containing Ag nanoparticles that are formed in situ, solely by mixing micrometre-sized Ag flakes, fluorine rubbers, and surfactant. Our printable elastic composites exhibit conductivity higher than 4,000 S cm-1 (highest value: 6,168 S cm-1) at 0% strain, and 935 S cm-1 when stretched up to 400%. Ag nanoparticle formation is influenced by the surfactant, heating processes, and elastomer molecular weight, resulting in a drastic improvement of conductivity. Fully printed sensor networks for stretchable robots are demonstrated, sensing pressure and temperature accurately, even when stretched over 250%.
Keyphrases
  • silver nanoparticles
  • healthcare
  • quantum dots
  • visible light
  • highly efficient
  • gold nanoparticles
  • machine learning
  • big data
  • walled carbon nanotubes
  • deep learning
  • artificial intelligence