Ultrafast
Self-Healing Nanocomposites via Infrared Laser and Their Application
in Flexible Electronics
- Publication date
- Publisher
Abstract
The continuous evolution
toward flexible electronics with mechanical robust property and restoring
structure simultaneously places high demand on a set of polymeric
material substrate. Herein, we describe a composite material composed
of a polyurethane based on Diels–Alder chemistry (PU-DA) covalently
linked with functionalized graphene nanosheets (FGNS), which shows
mechanical robust and infrared (IR) laser self-healing properties
at ambient conditions and is therefore suitable for flexible substrate
applications. The mechanical strength can be tuned by varying the
amount of FGNS and breaking strength can reach as high as 36 MPa with
only 0.5 wt % FGNS loading. On rupture, the initial mechanical properties
are restored with more than 96% healing efficiency after 1 min irradiation
time by 980 nm IR laser. Especially, this is the highest value of
healing efficiency reported in the self-healable materials based on
DA chemistry systems until now, and the composite exhibits a high
volume resistivity up to 5.6 × 10<sup>11</sup> Ω·cm
even the loading of FGNS increased to 1.0 wt %. Moreover, the conductivity
of the broken electric circuit which was fabricated by silver paste
drop-cast on the healable composite substrate was completely recovered
via IR laser irradiating bottom substrate mimicking human skin. These
results demonstrate that the FGNS-PU-DA nanocomposite can be used
as self-healing flexible substrate for the next generation of intelligent
flexible electronics