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ENERGY TECH
Stretching the limits on conducting wires
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Jul 28, 2015


In this movie, a carbon-nanotube-sheathed rubber fiber is being evaluated as a conductive wire in a pacemaker cable. The oscilloscope recording shows that the voltage pulses from the pacemaker are unaffected by even extreme fiber twisting, stretching and bending. Image courtesy The Alan G. MacDiarmid NanoTech Institute.

In the race to produce highly stretchable conductors, researchers have developed a new technique that aligns sheets of layered carbon nanotubes along stretched rubber cores, creating an extremely flexible conductive fiber.

From pacemaker leads to flexible displays and batteries, there is a growing need for fibers that don't lose their conductivity upon repeated stretching, twisting or flexing.

The challenge has been to create a conductive material that is highly elastic, but that maintains a high level of conductivity when distorted - which is often not the case for existing materials that use variations of nanofibers, graphene, fiber and rubber.

Liu and colleagues dramatically improve upon these other materials by stretching rubber fiber cores to roughly 1400%, and then aligning a sheath of carbon nanotubes in parallel to the strained core.

Upon relaxation of the core, the nanotube sheath will buckle but will not break. This technique offers an impressive stretch-to-conductivity ratio, where there is less than a 5% decrease in electrical conductivity when the material is stretched by 1000%.

The team has already taken this technique one step further by creating a more complicated combination of materials that uses a second layer of rubber. This allows for a high degree of twist within the combined materials, which could be used to control movement in artificial muscles.

By creating significantly more efficient materials, this research could have a substantial impact on future medical devices, optical elements, and robotics. A Perspective by Tushar Ghosh provides more insights about this new technique.

"Hierarchically buckled sheath-core fibers for superelastic electronics, sensors, and muscles."


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