What you’ll learn:
- The challenges of powering skin-attached biosensors.
- Using a laser-ablated micro-supercapacitor to provide a solution.
- The performance yielded by the ablated supercapacitor.
Wearable medical patches offer the potential to monitor and report critical body parameters in real-time, but they need power, of course. One option is to use some sort of backscatter scheme, though this requires relatively close proximity to the primary unit and can only provide limited, sporadic power. Batteries and supercapacitors are also options but have their drawbacks as well. One of them is their physical rigidity and inflexibility, which is at odds with the natural skin motion of humans.
To address this drawback, researchers at Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH/South Korea), and the Korea Institute of Industrial Technology (KITECH), achieved a significant breakthrough in developing a small-scale energy-storage device capable of stretching, twisting, folding, and wrinkling. Recognizing that micro-supercapacitors (MSCs) are a promising candidate for deformable energy storage due to their relatively high power density, rapid charging, and long lifecycle, they looked into the stiffness issue.
How to Fabricate the Flexible, Finely Patterned Electrodes
Fabrication of interdigitated electrode patterns capable of maintaining the energy-storage performance under repeated stretching and twisting is a challenge, because brittle materials like gold (Au) have been commonly used as an electrode. Meanwhile, although eutectic gallium-indium liquid metal (EGaIn) has high conductivity and deformability, it’s extremely difficult to achieve a fine patterning of EGaIn due to its very high surface tension.
The research team successfully fabricated the fine patterning using laser ablation of both EGaIn and graphene (serving as an active material) layers on a stretchable substrate of SEBS (polystyrene-block-poly(ethylene-co-butylene)-block-polystyrene copolymer). They also integrated a deformable MSC with a standard light-emitting diode to demonstrate the feasibility of MSC as a deformable power source (Fig. 1).
Test Results of the Micro-Supercapacitor
Key to their process was that the underlying stretchable SEBS substrate was not damaged during the laser ablation of EGaIn and graphene layers, thus maintaining the flexibility of the MSC device. The areal capacitance of the resulting MSC retains its original value even after stretching up to 1,000 cycles. The fabricated MSCs operate stably under various mechanical deformations, including stretching, folding, twisting, and wrinkling.
Further, owing to the intrinsic liquid characteristics of EGaIn current collector, the areal capacitance of the fabricated MSC retained 90% of its original value even after repetitive folding and 20% stretching up to 1,000 cycles (Fig. 2).
Their work is detailed in a 10-page paper “Deformable micro-supercapacitor fabricated via laser ablation patterning of Graphene/liquid metal” published in npj Flexible Electronics, along with a 13-page Supplementary Information posting.