Chemical engineer Zhenan Bao and her team of researchers at Stanford have spent nearly two decades trying to develop skin-like integrated circuits that can be stretched, folded, bent and twisted – working all the while – and then snap back without fail, every time. Such circuits presage a day of wearable and implantable products, but one hurdle has always stood in the way.

Lab mates in the Bao Research Group at Stanford demonstrate the flexibility and stretchability of their artificial skin made using their newly created printing method. (Image credit: Yuqing Zheng)

Namely, “How does one produce a completely new technology in quantities great enough to make commercialization possible?” Bao said.

Bao and team think they have a solution. In a new study, the group describes how they have printed stretchable-yet-durable integrated circuits on rubbery, skin-like materials, using the same equipment designed to make solid silicon chips – an accomplishment that could ease the transition to commercialization by switching foundries that today make rigid circuits to producing stretchable ones.

The process, detailed in this week’s issue of the journal Science, allowed the researchers to squeeze more than 40,000 transistors in a single square centimeter of stretchable circuitry, but the team thinks double that number is within reach. While that would still be a far cry from the billions of transistors that can be squeezed into the same area on silicon chips, it would be enough to create simple circuits for on-skin sensors, body-scale networks and implantable bioelectronics with applications yet to be imagined.

“Our method improves elastic-transistor density by more than 100 times what anyone else has achieved so far. And it does it with excellent uniformity in the transistors while sacrificing nothing in electronic or mechanical performance,” said postdoctoral researcher Yu-Qing Zheng, co-first author of the paper.

Old process, new chemistry

A major advantage of the Stanford process is that it can be done with the same equipment used to make silicon chips today. The process, known as photolithography, uses ultraviolet (UV) light to transfer an intricate, electrically active geometric pattern – a circuit – onto a solid substrate, layer by layer. It’s a complex, multistep process of coating, exposing with light, chemical etching and rinsing that leaves behind the all-important circuit.

This method has worked for decades in the semiconductor industry but, to date, the chemicals used to dissolve and wash away the light-resistant materials also wash away the skin-like polymers that are the foundation of stretchable circuits. By developing new photochemistries that work on these stretchable materials, Bao’s team is teaching tried-and-true manufacturing equipment to do new tricks. In fact, the Stanford process even does away with some of the steps necessary in silicon manufacturing. It all adds up to a remarkable result.

“Our process is more efficient and might be able to produce stretchable circuits more cost-effectively than rigid ones,” said postdoctoral scholar Yuxin Liu, co-first author of the paper.

Dense and durable

The team used the new process to produce flexible circuits of roughly the same electrical performance as transistors used for current computer displays – useful for practical applications – then tested their materials for durability and performance. Stretching the circuits to double their original dimensions, both parallel and perpendicular to the circuit direction, the newly printed materials showed no cracks, delamination or, most important, decline in function. Electrically, the transistors remained stable, even after 1,000 repeated stretches.

“With improvements in transistor density, this process could lead to new applications for flexible circuitry,” said postdoctoral fellow Donglai Zhong, a co-first author on the study.

Other Stanford authors include postdoctoral scholars Deyu Liu, Hung-Chin Wu, Jinxing Li and Helen Tran; research engineer Chenxin Zhu; laboratory director Jeffrey B.-H. Tok; and doctoral candidates Shayla Nikzad, Shuhan Liu and Zhiao Yu.

This study was funded by the Stanford Catalyst for Collaborative Solutions, Stanford Nano Shared Facilities and the National Science Foundation.

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