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1.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 16(19): 25589-25599, 2024 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38696218

ABSTRACT

The newly emerging liquid metal flexible electronics are gaining increasing applications over the world due to their outstanding adaptability and printability. Here, we proposed a generalized purpose thermo-activated hybrid transfer printing method for the rapid fabrication of multifunctional soft electronics, which can significantly reduce the difficulty facing existing technologies. This printing involves two delivery and deposition processes of liquid metals and the allied inks (toners) based on their adhesion selection mechanisms. Through developing office supplies, the laser printer could directly print toner masks on soft substrates, such as polydimethylsiloxane film. The heating plate was applied to remove the toner sacrificial mask after rolling liquid metal inks, resulting in retaining the liquid metal circuits on the target substrate. For illustration, diverse materials and inks are adapted to the strategy of constructing flexible electronics. Particularly, colorful circuits, flexible heaters, transparent circuitry, and soft programmable light-emitting diode array displays with multilayer circuits have been fabricated and tested. This general and easily accessible method allows for the rapid acquisition of user-designed soft electronics and is expected to promote the widespread use of flexible electronics in e-skin, sensing, displays, etc.

2.
Adv Mater ; 36(7): e2309999, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37931919

ABSTRACT

The classical Turing morphogenesis often occurs in nonmetallic solution systems due to the sole competition of reaction and diffusion processes. Here, this work conceives that gallium (Ga) based liquid metals (LMs) possess the ability to alloy, diffuse, and react with a range of solid metals (SMs) and thus should display Turing instability leading to a variety of nonequilibrium spatial concentration patterns. This work discloses a general mechanism for obtaining labyrinths, stripes, and spots-like stationary Turing patterns in the LM-SM reaction-diffusion systems (GaX-Y), taking the gallium indium alloy and silver substrate (GaIn-Ag) system as a proof of concept. It is only when Ga atoms diffuse over Y much faster than X while X reacts with Y preferentially, that Turing instability occurs. In such a metallic system, Ga serves as an inhibitor and X as an activator. The dominant factors in tuning the patterning process include temperature and concentration. Intermetallic compounds contained in the Turing patterns and their competitive reactions have also been further clarified. This LM Turing instability mechanism opens many opportunities for constructing microstructure systems utilizing condensed matter to experimentally explore the general morphogenesis process.

3.
Small ; 19(21): e2207327, 2023 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36866492

ABSTRACT

Constructing wrinkled structures on the surface of materials to obtain new functions has broad application prospects. Here a generalized method is reported to fabricate multi-scale and diverse-dimensional oxide wrinkles on liquid metal surfaces by an electrochemical anodization method. The oxide film on the surface of the liquid metal is successfully thickened to hundreds of nanometers by electrochemical anodization, and then the micro-wrinkles with height differences of several hundred nanometers are obtained by the growth stress. It is succeeded in altering the distribution of growth stress by changing the substrate geometry to induce different wrinkle morphologies, such as one-dimensional striped wrinkles and two-dimensional labyrinth wrinkles. Further, radial wrinkles are obtained under the hoop stress induced by the difference in surface tensions. These hierarchical wrinkles of different scales can exist on the liquid metal surface simultaneously. Surface wrinkles of liquid metal may have potential applications in the future for flexible electronics, sensors, displays, and so on.

4.
Adv Mater ; 35(7): e2209392, 2023 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36416104

ABSTRACT

Room temperature liquid metals (LM) such as gallium (Ga) own the potential to react with specific materials which would incubate new application categories. Here, diverse self-organized ring patterns due to nonequilibrium reaction-diffusion and spreading-limitation of Ga-based LM clusters on gold (Au) film are reported, among which diffusion is the controlling step and the self-limiting oxide layer plays the role of kinetic barrier. Such phenomena, classically known as the Liesegang rings, mainly occur in electrolyte media. Unlike existing systems, the present periodic crystallization mechanism enables highly symmetric spatiotemporal periodic Liesegang rings on a smaller scale under ambient conditions. Typically, the Ga-Au and eutectic gallium-indium alloy (EGaIn)-Au reaction-diffusion-spreading systems are constructed, obtaining the revert type and hybrid type concentric Liesegang patterns, respectively. The competitive patterning behavior of the intermediate phase products AuGa2 and AuIn2 in hybrid Liesegang patterns is further analyzed by altering the initial Ga/In mass ratio, first-principles calculations, and molecular dynamic simulations. When the mass ratio of In in GaIn alloy exceeds 15%, it will preferentially react with Au. The discovery of LM Liesegang phenomenon is expected to be a flashpoint for self-organized reaction-diffusion systems and offers promising rules for diverse areas such as materials synthesis and the jewelry design industry.

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