1 research outputs found
Hierarchical Nanoscale Structuring of Solution-Processed 2D van der Waals Networks for Wafer-Scale, Stretchable Electronics
Two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors
are promising for
next-generation
electronics that are lightweight, flexible, and stretchable. Achieving
stretchability with suppressed crack formation, however, is still
difficult without introducing lithographically etched micropatterns,
which significantly reduces active device areas. Herein, we report
a solution-based hierarchical structuring to create stretchable semiconducting
films that are continuous over wafer-scale areas via self-assembly of two-dimensional nanosheets. Electrochemically exfoliated
MoS2 nanosheets with large lateral sizes (∼1 μm)
are first assembled into a uniform film on a prestrained thermoplastic
substrate, followed by strain relief of the substrate to create nanoscale
wrinkles. Subsequent strain-relief cycles with the presence of soluble
polymer films produce hierarchical wrinkles with multigenerational
structures. Stretchable MoS2 films are then realized by
curing an elastomer directly on the wrinkled surface and dissolving
the thermoplastic. Three-generation hierarchical MoS2 wrinkles
are resistant to cracking up to nearly 100% substrate stretching and
achieve drastically enhanced photoresponsivity compared to the flat
counterpart over the visible and NIR regimes, while the flat MoS2 film is beneficial in creating strain sensors because of
its strain-dependent electrical response