Researchers in the Cockrell School of Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin have developed a first-of-its-kind self-healing gel that repairs and connects electronic circuits, creating opportunities to advance the development of flexible electronics, biosensors and batteries as energy storage devices.
Although technology is moving toward lighter, flexible, foldable and rollable electronics, the existing circuits that power them are not built to flex freely and repeatedly self-repair cracks or breaks that can happen from normal wear and tear.
Until now, self-healing materials have relied on application of external stimuli such as light or heat to activate repair. The UT Austin “supergel” material has high conductivity (the degree to which a material conducts electricity) and strong mechanical and electrical self-healing properties.
“In the last decade, the self-healing concept has been popularized by people working on different applications, but this is the first time it has been done without external stimuli,” said mechanical engineering assistant professor Guihua Yu, who developed the gel. “There’s no need for heat or light to fix the crack or break in a circuit or battery, which is often required by previously developed self-healing materials.”
Yu and his team created the self-healing gel by combining two gels: a self-assembling metal-ligand gel that provides self-healing properties and a polymer hydrogel that is a conductor. A paper on the synthesis of their hydrogel appears in the November issue of Nano Letters.
In this latest paper, the researchers describe how they used a disc-shaped liquid crystal molecule to enhance the conductivity, biocompatibility and permeability of their polymer hydrogel. They were able to achieve about 10 times the conductivity of other polymer hydrogels used in bioelectronics and conventional rechargeable batteries. The nanostructures that make up the gel are the smallest structures capable of providing efficient charge and energy transport.
In a separate paper published in Nano Letters in September, Yu introduced the self-healing hybrid gel. The second ingredient of the self-healing hybrid gel is a metal-ligand supramolecular gel. Using terpyridine molecules to create the framework and zinc atoms as a structural glue, the molecules form structures that are able to self-assemble, giving it the ability to automatically heal after a break.
When the supramolecular gel is introduced into the polymer hydrogel, forming the hybrid gel, its mechanical strength and elasticity are enhanced.
To construct the self-healing electronic circuit, Yu believes the self-healing gel would not replace the typical metal conductors that transport electricity, but it could be used as a soft joint, joining other parts of the circuit.
“This gel can be applied at the circuit’s junction points because that’s often where you see the breakage,” he said. “One day, you could glue or paste the gel to these junctions so that the circuits could be more robust and harder to break.”
Read more: New ‘Self-Healing’ Gel Makes Electronics More Flexible
The Latest on: Self-Healing Gel
[google_news title=”” keyword=”Self-Healing Gel” num_posts=”10″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]
via Google News
The Latest on: Self-Healing Gel
- Robots Made from Human Cells Can Move on Their Own and Heal Woundson December 1, 2023 at 11:07 am
Researchers have created “anthrobots” out of human lung cells that are capable of moving independently and even healing damaged tissue ...
- Self-healing robotic gripper could be the future of sustainable soft roboticson November 26, 2023 at 4:01 pm
Researchers have developed a self-healing robotic gripper for use in soft robotics that is adaptable, recyclable and resilient to damage, thanks to heat-assisted autonomous healing. A pressure sensor ...
- Self-healing concrete patches up cracks with dormant bacteriaon November 20, 2023 at 12:53 am
Now researchers at Drexel University have demonstrated a type of self-healing concrete embedded with “BioFibers” that use bacteria to patch up cracks as they form. You don’t get to be ...
- Stronger, stretchier, self-healing plasticon November 1, 2023 at 5:00 pm
An innovative plastic, stronger and stretchier than the current standard type and which can be healed with heat, remembers its shape and partially biodegradable, has been developed. They created ...
- Self-Healing Concrete: What Ancient Roman Concrete Can Teach Uson April 3, 2023 at 12:08 am
Could so-called ‘hot mixing’, with pockets of reactive lime clasts inside the cured concrete provide self-healing properties? At its core, this is the recipe which any hydraulic cement uses ...
- Lycimond Wound Healing Gelon February 3, 2023 at 5:23 am
Lycimond Wound Healing Gel is a medicine used in the treatment of nutritional deficiencies. It helps facilitate the absorption of calcium from the small intestine and improves the function and ...
- New Self-healing Flexible Sensors Could Make 'Electronic Skin' a Realityon November 2, 2016 at 1:26 pm
that may impair the device. The technology uses a polymer that, as previously mentioned, mimics the self-healing properties of human skin. It is a bendable and stretchable chemiresistor where ...
via Bing News