Abstract
Flexible and soft bioelectronics display conflicting demands on miniaturization, compliance, and reliability. Here, the authors investigate the design and performance of thin encapsulation multilayers against hermeticity and mechanical integrity. Partially cracked organic/inorganic multilayer coatings are demonstrated to display surprisingly year-long hermetic lifetime under demanding mechanical and environmental loading. The thin hermetic encapsulation is grown in a single process chamber as a continuous multilayer with dyads of atomic layer deposited (ALD) Al2 O3 -TiO2 and chemical vapor deposited Parylene C films with strong interlayer adhesion. Upon tensile loading, tortuous diffusion pathways defined along channel cracks in the ALD oxide films and through tough Parylene films efficiently postpone the hermeticity failure of the partially cracked coating. The authors assessed the coating performance against prolonged exposure to biomimetic physiological conditions using coated magnesium films, platinum interdigitated electrodes, and optoelectronic devices prepared on stretchable substrates. Designed extension of the lifetime preventing direct failures reduces from over 5 years yet tolerates the lifetime of 3 years even with the presence of critical damage, while others will directly fail less than two months at 37 °C. This strategy should accelerate progress on thin hermetic packaging for miniaturized and compliant implantable electronics.
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