Environmentally stable and stretchable polymer electronics enabled by surface-tethered nanostructured molecular-level protection

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Stretchable polymer semiconductors (PSCs) are essential for soft stretchable electronics. However, their environmental stability remains a longstanding concern. Here we report a surface-tethered stretchable molecular protecting layer to realize stretchable polymer electronics that are stable in direct contact with physiological fluids, containing water, ions and biofluids. This is achieved through the covalent functionalization of fluoroalkyl chains onto a stretchable PSC film surface to form densely packed nanostructures. The nanostructured fluorinated molecular protection layer (FMPL) improves the PSC operational stability over an extended period of 82 days and maintains its protection under mechanical deformation. We attribute the ability of FMPL to block water absorption and diffusion to its hydrophobicity and high fluorination surface density. The protection effect of the FMPL (similar to 6 nm thickness) outperforms various micrometre-thick stretchable polymer encapsulants, leading to a stable PSC charge carrier mobility of similar to 1 cm(2) V-1 s(-1) in harsh environments such as in 85-90%-humidity air for 56 days or in water or artificial sweat for 42 days (as a benchmark, the unprotected PSC mobility degraded to 10(-6) cm(2) V-1 s(-1) in the same period). The FMPL also improved the PSC stability against photo-oxidative degradation in air. Overall, we believe that our surface tethering of the nanostructured FMPL is a promising approach to achieve highly environmentally stable and stretchable polymer electronics. [GRAPHICS] .
Publisher
NATURE PORTFOLIO
Issue Date
2023-10
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Citation

NATURE NANOTECHNOLOGY, v.18, no.10, pp.1175 - 1184

ISSN
1748-3387
DOI
10.1038/s41565-023-01418-y
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/313766
Appears in Collection
MS-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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