Manipulating charges
is fundamental to numerous systems, and this
ability is achieved through materials of diverse characteristics.
Electrets are dielectrics that trap charges or dipoles. Applications
include electrophotography, microphones, air filters, and energy harvesters.
To trap charges or dipoles for a long time, electrets are commonly
made of hard dielectrics. Stretchable dielectrics are short–lived
electrets. The two properties, longevity and stretchability, conflict;
existing electrets struggle to attain both. This work describes an
approach to developing stretchable electrets. Nanoparticles of a hard
electret are immobilized in a matrix of dielectric elastomer. The
composite divides the labor of two functions: the particles trap charges
with longevity, and the matrix enables stretchability. The design
considerably broadens the choice of materials to enable stretchable
electrets. Silica nanoparticles in the polydimethylsiloxane elastomer
achieve a charge density ∼ 4 × 10–5 C
m–2 and a lifetime beyond 60 days. Long–lived,
stretchable electrets open extensive opportunities.