Novel insights regarding the ability of encapsulated metal interconnections to deform due to bending are presented. Encapsulated metal interconnections are used as electric conductor or measurement system within a wide range of applications fields, e.g. biomedical, wearable, textile applications. Nevertheless the mechanical analysis remains limited to reliability investigation of these configurations. Different papers and research groups claim that meander-shaped metal interconnections are predisposed for these applications fields due to their deformability while, to the author’s knowledge, no reports are found about this ability.
An analysis based on the work needed to bend interconnections to a certain curvature will be used to compare different interconnection configurations with each other. The experimental as well as the simulation setup is based on PDMS encapsulated PI-enhanced Cu tracks. The results and conclusions are specific for this type of interconnections, but can be extended to a global conclusion about stretchable interconnections.
From the obtained insights it is proven that periodically meander-shaped interconnections need significant less work, up to more than 10 times less, to bend the interconnection to the same curvature compared to straight interconnection lines. Furthermore it shows out, for the meander-shaped interconnection, that per increase of 250µm encapsulation thickness the work raises with a factor 2. For straight interconnection lines the work in function of the encapsulation thickness is limited to 20%/250µm. The bendability of the straight interconnection lines is determined by the shape of the interconnection, where for meandered tracks the encapsulation will determine this factor, for an encapsulation thickness of maximum 1mm. For encapsulations > 1mm, the encapsulation thickness will become the predominant factor which determines the deformability for both interconnection shapes