Abstract

Cracks typically deteriorate the structural and electrical properties of materials when not properly controlled. A few papers recently reported the controlling methods of crack formation in the brittle materials utilizing the lateral V-notch structure. For ductile materials, however, there have been few papers reporting cracking phenomenon, but full cracking control including predesigned initiation, propagation, and termination has not been reported yet. Therefore, we report a predesigned full cracking control in ductile conductive carbon nanotube (CNT) films by introducing inkjet-printed L-shape micronotch (LMN) structures inspired by directional stamp perforation marks. In spite of the high fracture toughness of CNT films, the LMNs determine locations of initial crack formation and guide crack propagation in a predesigned way. Selective connection of isolated cracks in the CNT film increases its resistance monotonically under tensile strain and thus tremendously well maintains high linearity (adj. R2 value > 0.99) in resistance change over record large strain ranges of 0.01-100%, which enables us to quantitatively classify strain values accurately for previously reported practical body signals for the first time. We believe that our facile printing-based crack control strategy not only provides a comprehensive solution to various stretchable sensor applications but also builds a new milestone for cracking mechanism studies in fracture mechanics.

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