Abstract

Commonplace electronic appliances for consumer or industrial use are still mostly rigid or at maximum flexible entities. The flexibility of foldable units like laptops or cell phones is usually realized through flexible circuit board (FCB) interconnectors. Although flexibility allows for considerably enhanced degrees of freedom in design, it is not compatible with more complex three dimensional curvatures and dynamics thereof. In the past years a number or approaches to realize stretchable electronic circuits in order to reach beyond unidirectional bending or folding of electronics have been reported. In the frame of the European Project STELLA a particular fabrication technology for stretchable electronic systems has been developed at Technische Universitaet Berlin. This technology, termed ?stretchable circuit board? (SCB) technology, is derived from conventional printed circuit board manufacturing. Stretchability of the boards is enabled by (i) using polyurethane instead of FR4 or polyimide as a carrier material of the copper structures and (ii) a meandering design of the Cu interconnects between commercial (rigid) electronic components. Such boards can be (once) extended by up to 300% before fracture of the Cu interconnections. For repeated elongation/relaxation cycles elongations with a few percent are allowable in order reach high cycle numbers. Electronic components are assembled after local application of a solder mask and surface finish for solderability. The electronic interconnection is established using a low temperature solder alloy (SnBi, Tm=142?C). For protection and enhanced system robustness all components are subsequently encapsulated within a polyurethane capping. Systems thus realized can be readily attached to different kinds of surfaces. Most interesting for various application cases is the easy attachment to textile substrates by a simple lamination process. The field use case studies of stretchable systems in the frame of the STELLA are mostly sensor applications in the field of medical electronics like a breathing frequency monitor for babies, a shoe insole pressure sensor for diabetes patients, or a band aid inlay to measure pressure and humidity of an acute wound when pressure therapy is applied. The latter application will be described in more detail since different aspects of bio-medical applications can be explained with this example. Another emerging field of applications is textile electronics, where it has been proven, that stretchable electronics can serve a versatile building blocks for complex electronic systems integrated in textiles.

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