Robust and Multifunctional Liquid-Metal Embedded Elastomers for Ultrastretchable Electronics: a Short Review
Kaveh Alizadeh

TL;DR
This review discusses Liquid-Metal Embedded Elastomers (LMEEs), highlighting their exceptional stretchability, self-healing capabilities, and potential applications in soft robotics and wearable electronics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of LMEEs, including their properties, fabrication methods, self-healing features, and advantages over other conductive materials.
Findings
LMEEs can stretch up to 600% without losing conductivity.
They enable autonomous self-healing circuits after mechanical damage.
LMEEs are suitable for soft robotics and wearable electronics.
Abstract
Soft electronics are a promising and revolutionary alternative for traditional electronics when safe physical interaction between machines and the human body is required. Among various materials architectures developed for producing soft and stretchable electronics, Liquid-Metal Embedded Elastomers (LMEEs), which contain Ga-based inclusions as a conductive phase, has drawn considerable attention in various emerging fields such as wearable computing and bio-inspired robotics. This is because LMEEs exhibit a unique combination of desirable mechanical, electrical, and thermal properties. For instance, these so-called multifunctional materials can undergo large deformations as high as 600% strain without losing their electrical conductivity. Moreover, the desperation of conductive liquid-metal inclusions within the entire medium of an elastomer makes it possible to fabricate autonomously…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials · Dielectric materials and actuators · Tactile and Sensory Interactions
