Abstract

With the rapid development of intelligent electronic devices, conductive fibers have become very critical to signal transmission devices. However, metal-based rigid conductive wires, such as high-modulus copper and silver wires, are prone to signal failure owing to tensile breakage under large strain conditions. Therefore, strain-insensitive stretchable conductive fibers for signal transmission are critical for next-generation wearable devices. Herein, a stretchable conductive fiber with a built-in helical structure is constructed by a "speed discrepancy" fiber-coating strategy with mass scalable production (60 cm/min). Such a "speed discrepancy" strategy is the key mechanism to template-free fabricate a built-in helical structure of the stretchable conductive fiber. The resultant fiber exhibits high conductivity (873 S/cm), stable insensitive signal transmission with a high quality factor (47.4), and a low relative resistance change (∼6%) under large strain. The built-in helical structure inspired by loofah whiskers endows the fiber with excellent strain insensitivity, and it can withstand large strains. On the proof of concept, our fiber can be seamlessly knitted, woven, and braided into smart textiles as an ideal signal transmission device under large strains, which will undoubtedly promote the development of intelligent electronic textiles and next-generation wearable devices.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call