Gas-Permeable, Ultrathin, Stretchable Epidermal Electronics with Porous Electrodes

ACS Nano. 2020 May 26;14(5):5798-5805. doi: 10.1021/acsnano.0c00906. Epub 2020 May 4.

Abstract

We present gas-permeable, ultrathin, and stretchable electrodes enabled by self-assembled porous substrates and conductive nanostructures. An efficient and scalable breath figure method is employed to introduce the porous skeleton, and then silver nanowires (AgNWs) are dip-coated and heat-pressed to offer electric conductivity. The resulting film has a transmittance of 61%, sheet resistance of 7.3 Ω/sq, and water vapor permeability of 23 mg cm-2 h-1. With AgNWs embedded below the surface of the polymer, the electrode exhibits excellent stability in the presence of sweat and after long-term wear. We demonstrate the promising potential of the electrode for wearable electronics in two representative applications: skin-mountable biopotential sensing for healthcare and textile-integrated touch sensing for human-machine interfaces. The electrode can form conformal contact with human skin, leading to low skin-electrode impedance and high-quality biopotential signals. In addition, the textile electrode can be used in a self-capacitance wireless touch sensing system.

Keywords: breath figure; gas permeable; healthcare; human−machine interfaces; silver nanowires.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't