Robotic Materials

Stretchable Conductive Composites Based on Metal Wools for Use as Electrical Vias in Soft Devices

2015

Article

rm


Soft devices can be bent, stretched, and compressed reversibly, but conventional wires are rigid. This work describes stretchable composites that are easily fabricated with simple tools and commodity materials, and that can provide a strategy for electrical wiring that meets certain needs of soft devices. These composites are made by combining metal wool and elastomeric polymers. Embedding fine (average fiber width ≈25 μm) steel wool (or other metal wools) in a silicone polymer creates an electrically conductive path through the nonconductive elastomer. This composite is flexible, stretchable, compressible, inexpensive, and simple to incorporate into the bodies of soft devices. It is also electrically anisotropic, and shows maximum conductivity along the majority axis of the fibers, but maximum extension perpendicular to this axis. The utility of this composite for creating an electrically conductive path through an elastomer was demonstrated in several devices, including: a soft, solderless breadboard, a soft touch sensor, and a soft strain gauge.

Author(s): Joshua Lessing and Stephen A. Morin and Christoph Keplinger and Alok S. Tayi and George M. Whitesides
Journal: Advanced Functional Materials
Volume: 25
Number (issue): 9
Pages: 1418--1425
Year: 2015
Month: March

Department(s): Robotic Materials
Bibtex Type: Article (article)
Paper Type: Journal

DOI: 10.1002/adfm.201403396
State: Published

BibTex

@article{Keplinger15-AFM-Composites,
  title = {Stretchable Conductive Composites Based on Metal Wools for Use as Electrical Vias in Soft Devices},
  author = {Lessing, Joshua and Morin, Stephen A. and Keplinger, Christoph and Tayi, Alok S. and Whitesides, George M.},
  journal = {Advanced Functional Materials},
  volume = {25},
  number = {9},
  pages = {1418--1425},
  month = mar,
  year = {2015},
  doi = {10.1002/adfm.201403396},
  month_numeric = {3}
}