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Highly Conductive Stretchable All‐Plastic Electrodes Using a Novel Dipping‐Embedded Transfer Method for High‐Performance Wearable Sensors and Semitransparent Organic Solar Cells
Author(s) -
Fan Xi,
Xu Bingang,
Wang Naixiang,
Wang Jinzhao,
Liu Shenghua,
Wang Hao,
Yan Feng
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
advanced electronic materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.25
H-Index - 56
ISSN - 2199-160X
DOI - 10.1002/aelm.201600471
Subject(s) - pedot:pss , materials science , electrical conductor , gauge factor , conductive polymer , indium tin oxide , electrode , optoelectronics , organic solar cell , elastomer , stretchable electronics , conductivity , composite material , nanotechnology , polymer , electronics , thin film , fabrication , electrical engineering , medicine , chemistry , alternative medicine , engineering , pathology
Conducting polymer (CP) is a key component of wearable, flexible, and semitransparent electronics. As a classic CP, highly conductive PEDOT:PSS has been achieved on glass via strong acid treatments. However, it is a great challenge to realize highly conductive stretchable films of PEDOT:PSS, due to limits of strong acid treatments and poor intrinsic stretchability of as‐cast films. Herein, a highly conductive stretchable all‐plastic electrode of CP embedded into PDMS elastomers (PEDOT:PSS–PDMS) via a dipping‐embedded transfer method is reported. The method enables large‐area PEDOT:PSS films that are transferred from quartz to PDMS. The PEDOT:PSS–PDMS films have high conductivity of 2890 S cm −1 and an enhanced stretchability of 20% strain. Underlying mechanisms of high yield of the large‐area productions, high conductivity, and improved stretchability are investigated. Furthermore, two types of devices including wearable strain sensors and semitransparent organic solar cells (OSCs) are fabricated using the films. The wearable sensors show high gauge factor of ≈22 under 20% strain and the OSCs exhibit a power conversion efficiency of 3.75% and 3.46% when lights are illuminated from PDMS and indium tin oxide, respectively.