Abstract

Stretchable conductors with stable electrical conductivity under various deformations are essential for wearable electronics, soft robots, and biointegrated devices. However, brittle film-based conductors on elastomeric substrates often suffer from unexpected electrical disconnection due to the obvious mechanical incompatibility between stiff films and soft substrates. We proposed a novel out-of-plane crack control strategy to achieve the strain-insensitive electrical performance of thin-film-based conductors, featuring conductive brittle materials, including nanocrystalline metals (Cu, Ag, Mo) and transparent oxides (ITO). Our metal film-based conductors exhibit an ultrahigh initial conductivity (1.3 × 105 S cm-1) and negligible resistance change (R/R0 = 1.5) over wide strain range from 0 to 130%, enabled by film-induced substrate cracking and liquid metal-induced electrical self-repairing. They could function well under multimodal deformations (stretching, bending, and twisting) and severe mechanical damage (cutting and puncturing). We demonstrated the strain-resilient electrical functionality of metal film-based conductors in a flexible light-emitting diode display that shows high mechanical compliance.

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