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Highly stretchable bilayer lattice structures that elongate via in-plane deformation
Burebi Yiming, Lei Wu, Mingqi Zhang, Zilong Han, Pei Zhao, Tiefeng Li, Zheng Jia*, Shaoxing Qu, Highly Stretchable Bilayer Lattice Structures that Elongate via in-Plane Deformation, Advanced Functional Materials, 2020, 1909473 (DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.201909473)
Many emerging technologies such as wearable batteries and electronics require stretchable functional structures made from intrinsically less deformable materials. The stretch capability of most demonstrated stretchable structures often relies on either initially out-of-plane configurations or the out-of-plane deflection of planar patterns. Such nonplanar features may dramatically increase the surface roughness, cause poor adhesion and adverse effects on subsequent multilayer processing, thereby posing a great challenge for flexible devices that require smooth surfaces (e.g., transparent electrodes in which flat-surface-enabled high optical transmittance is preferred). Inspired by the lamellar layouts of collagenous tissues, this work demonstrates a planar bilayer lattice structure, which can elongate substantially via only in-plane motion and thus maintain smooth surfaces. The constructed bilayer lattice exhibits a large stretchability up to 360%, far beyond the inherent deformability of the brittle constituent material and comparable to that of state-of-the-art stretchable structures for flexible electronics. A stretchable conductor employing the bilayer lattice designs can remain electrically conductive at a strain of 300%, demonstrating the functionality and potential applications of the bilayer lattice structure. This design opens a new avenue for the development of stretchable structures that demand smooth surfaces.
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Highly Stretchable Bilayer Lattice Structures That Elongate via In-Plane Deformation.pdf | 1.99 MB |
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Nice work!
How's the damage tolerance? That is, if some defects are introduced intentionally, how would the duciltity change with the degree of defect size?
Thanks!
Dear Yanfei, that's a very inspiring question! We are examining how the introduction of defects affects the stretchability of the structure. My gut feeling is this structure might be insensitive to small defects (e.g., a missing short ligament) below a threshold. There exist some studies on the damage tolerance of stretchable structures such as this one.