Abstract
Soft materials play a pivotal role in the efficacy of stretchable electronics and soft robotics, and the interface between
the soft devices and rigid counterparts is especially crucial to the overall performance. Herein, we develop polyimide−
polydimethylsiloxane (PI−PDMS) copolymers that, in various ratios, combine on a molecular level to give a series of chemically
similar materials with an extremely wide Young’s modulus range starting from soft 2 MPa and transitioning to rigid polymers with up
to 1500 MPa. Of particular significance is the copolymers’ capacity to prepare seamless stiffness gradients, as evidenced by strain
distribution analyses of gradient materials, due to them being unified on a molecular level. The copolymers and gradient materials
were successfully used as substrates for stretchable thin-film conductors and tested as dielectric elastomer actuators, demonstrating
their potential application as enabling components in stretchable electronics and soft robots.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Number of pages | 8 |
Journal | ACS Materials Au |
Publication status | Published - Nov 2024 |
Fields of science
- 304007 Tissue engineering
- 204002 Chemical reaction engineering
- 210004 Nanomaterials
- 104 Chemistry
- 104002 Analytical chemistry
- 104011 Materials chemistry
- 104014 Surface chemistry
- 104016 Photochemistry
- 104018 Polymer chemistry
- 104008 Catalysis
- 104010 Macromolecular chemistry
- 104015 Organic chemistry
- 104019 Polymer sciences
- 106002 Biochemistry
- 107002 Bionics
- 301305 Medical chemistry
- 301207 Pharmaceutical chemistry
- 301904 Cancer research
- 302009 Chemotherapy
JKU Focus areas
- Sustainable Development: Responsible Technologies and Management