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Showing papers by "Sheng Xu published in 2014"


Journal ArticleDOI
04 Apr 2014-Science
TL;DR: Experimental and theoretical approaches for using ideas in soft microfluidics, structured adhesive surfaces, and controlled mechanical buckling to achieve ultralow modulus, highly stretchable systems that incorporate assemblies of high-modulus, rigid, state-of-the-art functional elements are described.
Abstract: When mounted on the skin, modern sensors, circuits, radios, and power supply systems have the potential to provide clinical-quality health monitoring capabilities for continuous use, beyond the confines of traditional hospital or laboratory facilities. The most well-developed component technologies are, however, broadly available only in hard, planar formats. As a result, existing options in system design are unable to effectively accommodate integration with the soft, textured, curvilinear, and time-dynamic surfaces of the skin. Here, we describe experimental and theoretical approaches for using ideas in soft microfluidics, structured adhesive surfaces, and controlled mechanical buckling to achieve ultralow modulus, highly stretchable systems that incorporate assemblies of high-modulus, rigid, state-of-the-art functional elements. The outcome is a thin, conformable device technology that can softly laminate onto the surface of the skin to enable advanced, multifunctional operation for physiological monitoring in a wireless mode.

975 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, materials and composite designs for thin, breathable, soft electronics that can adhere strongly to the skin, with the ability to be applied and removed hundreds of times without damaging the devices or the skin.
Abstract: Research in stretchable electronics involves fundamental scientific topics relevant to applications with importance in human healthcare. Despite significant progress in active components, routes to mechanically robust construction are lacking. Here, we introduce materials and composite designs for thin, breathable, soft electronics that can adhere strongly to the skin, with the ability to be applied and removed hundreds of times without damaging the devices or the skin, even in regions with substantial topography and coverage of hair. The approach combines thin, ultralow modulus, cellular silicone materials with elastic, strain-limiting fabrics, to yield a compliant but rugged platform for stretchable electronics. Theoretical and experimental studies highlight the mechanics of adhesion and elastic deformation. Demonstrations include cutaneous optical, electrical and radio frequency sensors for measuring hydration state, electrophysiological activity, pulse and cerebral oximetry. Multipoint monitoring of a subject in an advanced driving simulator provides a practical example.

303 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the use of prestrain in the substrate is introduced, together with interconnects in narrow, serpentine shapes, to yield significantly enhanced elastic stretchability, to more than 100%.
Abstract: Stretchable electronic devices that exploit inorganic materials are attractive due to their combination of high performance with mechanical deformability, particularly for applications in biomedical devices that require intimate integration with human body. Several mechanics and materials schemes have been devised for this type of technology, many of which exploit deformable interconnects. When such interconnects are fully bonded to the substrate and/or encapsulated in a solid material, useful but modest levels of deformation (<30–40%) are possible, with reversible and repeatable mechanics. Here, the use of prestrain in the substrate is introduced, together with interconnects in narrow, serpentine shapes, to yield significantly enhanced (more than two times) stretchability, to more than 100%. Fracture and cyclic fatigue testing on structures formed with and without prestrain quantitatively demonstrate the possible enhancements. Finite element analyses (FEA) illustrates the effects of various material and geometric parameters. A drastic decrease in the elastic stretchability is observed with increasing metal thickness, due to changes in the buckling mode, that is, from local wrinkling at small thicknesses to absence of such wrinkling at large thicknesses, as revealed by experiment. An analytic model quantitatively predicts the wavelength of this wrinkling, and explains the thickness dependence of the buckling behaviors.

270 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A hierarchical computational model (HCM) based on the mechanism of ordered unraveling for postbuckling analysis of fractal inspired interconnects, in designs previously referred to as ‘self-similar’, under stretching is introduced.
Abstract: Stretchable electronics that require functional components with high areal coverages, antennas with small sizes and/or electrodes with invisibility under magnetic resonance imaging can benefit from the use of electrical wiring constructs that adopt fractal inspired layouts. Due to the complex and diverse microstructures inherent in high order interconnects/electrodes/antennas with such designs, traditional non-linear postbuckling analyses based on conventional finite element analyses (FEA) can be cumbersome and time-consuming. Here, we introduce a hierarchical computational model (HCM) based on the mechanism of ordered unraveling for postbuckling analysis of fractal inspired interconnects, in designs previously referred to as ‘self-similar’, under stretching. The model reduces the computational efforts of traditional approaches by many orders of magnitude, but with accurate predictions, as validated by experiments and FEA. As the fractal order increases from 1 to 4, the elastic stretchability can be enhanced by � 200 times, clearly illustrating the advantage of simple concepts in fractal design. These results, and the model in general, can be exploited in the development of optimal designs in wide ranging classes of stretchable electronics systems.

107 citations


01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: In this article, materials and composite designs for thin, breathable, soft electronics that can adhere strongly to the skin, with the ability to be applied and removed hundreds of times without damaging the devices or the skin.
Abstract: Research in stretchable electronics involves fundamental scientific topics relevant to applications with importance in human healthcare. Despite significant progress in active components, routes to mechanically robust construction are lacking. Here, we introduce materials and composite designs for thin, breathable, soft electronics that can adhere strongly to the skin, with the ability to be applied and removed hundreds of times without damaging the devices or the skin, even in regions with substantial topography and coverage of hair. The approach combines thin, ultralow modulus, cellular silicone materials with elastic, strain-limiting fabrics, to yield a compliant but rugged platform for stretchable electronics. Theoretical and experimental studies highlight the mechanics of adhesion and elastic deformation. Demonstrations include cutaneous optical, electrical and radio frequency sensors for measuring hydration state, electrophysiological activity, pulse and cerebral oximetry. Multipoint monitoring of a subject in an advanced driving simulator provides a practical example.

64 citations


Patent
05 Feb 2014
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an approach to provide electronic systems, including device arrays, comprising functional devices and/or device component(s) at least partially enclosed via one or more containment chambers.
Abstract: The present invention provides electronic systems, including device arrays, comprising functional device(s) and/or device component(s) at least partially enclosed via one or more containment chambers, such that the device(s) and/or device component(s) are at least partially, and optionally entirely, immersed in a containment fluid. Useful containment fluids for use in containment chambers of electronic devices of the invention include lubricants, electrolytes and/or electronically resistive fluids. In some embodiments, for example, electronic systems of the invention comprise one or more electronic devices and/or device components provided in free-standing and/or tethered configurations that decouple forces originating upon deformation, stretching or compression of a supporting substrate from the free standing or tethered device or device component.

64 citations


Patent
05 Feb 2014
TL;DR: The presente invention porte sur des systemes electroniques, y compris des reseaux de dispositifs, comprenant un ou plusieurs dispositifiers fonctionnels and/or compositif compositifiers au moins partiellement confines par l'intermediaire d'une ouplusieurs chambres de confinement as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: La presente invention porte sur des systemes electroniques, y compris des reseaux de dispositifs, comprenant un ou plusieurs dispositifs fonctionnels et/ou un ou plusieurs composants de dispositif au moins partiellement confines par l'intermediaire d'une ou plusieurs chambres de confinement, de telle sorte que le ou les dispositifs et/ou le ou les composants de dispositif sont au moins partiellement, et optionnellement, entierement, immerges dans un fluide de confinement. Des fluides de confinement utiles pour une utilisation dans des chambres de confinement de dispositifs electroniques de l'invention comprennent des lubrifiants, des electrolytes et/ou des fluides electroniquement resistifs. Selon certains modes de realisation, par exemple, des systemes electroniques de l'invention comprennent un ou plusieurs dispositifs electroniques et/ou composants de dispositif disposes dans des configurations auto-stables et/ou captives qui decouplent des forces provenant, lors d'une deformation, d'un etirement ou d'une compression d'un substrat de support, du dispositif auto-stable ou captif ou du composant de dispositif.