4.8 Article

Design Strategy for Transformative Electronic System toward Rapid, Bidirectional Stiffness Tuning using Graphene and Flexible Thermoelectric Device Interfaces

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 33, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202007239

Keywords

bidirectional stiffness tuning; flexible thermoelectric devices; graphene; supercooling of gallium; transformative electronics

Funding

  1. Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Ministry of Science and ICT [NRF-2018R1C1B6001706, NRF-2020M3C1B8A01111568]
  2. Samsung Electronics through Samsung Electronics-KAIST cooperation center

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A new design approach for tunable and adaptable electronics has been developed, utilizing graphene as a catalyst to accelerate the heterogeneous nucleation of gallium and integrating a flexible thermoelectric device for active temperature control to reduce the supercooling phenomenon during the solid-liquid transition of gallium. The results establish the foundations for accelerated bidirectional transformation of transformative electronics.
Electronics with tunable shape and stiffness can be applied in broad range of applications because their tunability allows their use in either rigid handheld form or soft wearable form, depending on needs. Previous research has enabled such reconfigurable electronics by integrating a thermally tunable gallium-based platform with flexible/stretchable electronics. However, supercooling phenomenon caused in the freezing process of gallium impedes reliable and rapid bidirectional rigid-soft conversion, limiting the full potential of this type of transformative electronics. Here, materials and electronics design strategies are reported to develop a transformative system with a gallium platform capable of fast reversible mechanical switching. In this electronic system, graphene is used as a catalyst to accelerate the heterogeneous nucleation of gallium to mitigate the degree of supercooling. Additionally, a flexible thermoelectric device is integrated as a means to provide active temperature control to further reduce the time for the solid-liquid transition of gallium. Analytical and experimental results establish the fundamentals for the design and optimized operation of transformative electronics for accelerated bidirectional transformation. Proof-of-concept demonstration of a reconfigurable system, which can convert between rigid handheld electronics and a flexible wearable biosensor, demonstrates the potential of this design approach for highly versatile electronics that can support multiple applications.

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