posted on 2025-04-09, 13:23authored byJeong
Eun Kang, Myeong Hoon Jeong, Kyoung Jin Choi
With the growing
interest in wearable or stretchable electronics,
research on stretchable electrodes has also been active. Generally,
metal electrodes have high conductivity but very low stretchability,
while organic electrodes have high stretchability but lower conductivity
than metals. In this paper, metal/organic hybrid electrodes were fabricated
on elastic poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) substrates to take advantage
of the high conductivity of metals and the high stretchability of
organic semiconductors. Additionally, by prestraining the PDMS substrate,
the stretchability of the electrodes was further increased. However,
the uniaxially prestrained electrodes produced compressive stresses
in the direction perpendicular to the stretching direction due to
Poisson’s effect, resulting in many cracks. To solve this problem,
biaxial prestrain was introduced to the PDMS substrate. The electrodes
fabricated with uniaxial prestrain exhibited a structure with wrinkles
aligned in one dimension, whereas the electrodes with biaxial prestrain
displayed highly ordered, two-dimensional wrinkle patterns arranged
on the electrode surface. The electrodes with biaxial prestrain maintained
stable electrical performance even after 200 cycles of stretching
at a strain of 50%, withstanding up to 130% strain. Furthermore, of
all the poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene): polystyrenesulfonate (PEDOT:PSS)-based
electrodes reported so far, our electrode showed the lowest sheet
resistance of 0.91 Ω/sq. The strategy of our study offers promising
opportunities for integrated wearable devices.