Self-Healing, Reconfigurable, Thermal-Switching, Transformative Electronics for Health Monitoring

Adv Mater. 2023 Apr;35(15):e2207742. doi: 10.1002/adma.202207742. Epub 2023 Mar 3.

Abstract

Soft, deformable electronic devices provide the means to monitor physiological information and health conditions for disease diagnostics. However, their practical utility is limited due to the lack of intrinsical thermal switching for mechanically transformative adaptability and self-healing capability against mechanical damages. Here, the design concepts, materials and physics, manufacturing approaches, and application opportunities of self-healing, reconfigurable, thermal-switching device platforms based on hyperbranched polymers and biphasic liquid metal are reported. The former provides excellent self-healing performance and unique tunable stiffness and adhesion regulated by temperature for the on-skin switch, whereas the latter results in liquid metal circuits with extreme stretchability (>900%) and high conductivity (3.40 × 104 S cm-1 ), as well as simple recycling capability. Triggered by the increased temperature from the skin surface, a multifunctional device platform can conveniently conform and strongly adhere to the hierarchically textured skin surface for non-invasive, continuous, comfortable health monitoring. Additionally, the self-healing and adhesive characteristics allow multiple multifunctional circuit components to assemble and completely wrap on 3D curvilinear surfaces. Together, the design, manufacturing, and proof-of-concept demonstration of the self-healing, transformative, and self-assembled electronics open up new opportunities for robust soft deformable devices, smart robotics, prosthetics, and Internet-of-Things, and human-machine interfaces on irregular surfaces.

Keywords: liquid metal printed circuits; multifunctional electronic devices; self-healing films; thermal-switching; three-dimensional conformal self-assembly; transformative characteristics.

MeSH terms

  • Electronics
  • Humans
  • Polymers
  • Robotics*
  • Skin
  • Wearable Electronic Devices*

Substances

  • Polymers