The Asian Age

E- tattoos may lead to next- gen wearable devices

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Washington: Scientists have developed highly flexible, ultra thin tattoo- like circuits using an off- the- shelf printer that can adhere to human skin and could power the next generation of wearable devices. The low- cost process adds trace amounts of an electrical­ly- conductive, liquid metal alloy to tattoo paper that adheres to human skin. These ultrathin tattoos can be applied easily with water, the same way one would apply a child's decorative tattoo with a damp sponge. Other tattoolike electronic­s either require complex fabricatio­n techniques inside a clean room or lack the material performanc­e required for stretchabl­e digital circuit functional­ity on skin. “We use a desktop inkjet printer to print traces of silver nanopartic­les on temporary tattoo paper," said Carmel Majidi, an associate professor at Carnegie Mellon University in the US. “We then coat the particles with a thin layer of gallium indium alloy that increases the electrical conductivi­ty and allows the printed circuit to be more mechanical­ly robust. The tattoos are ultrathin, very stretchabl­e, and inexpensiv­e to produce,” said Majidi. In addition to low- cost processing, these tattoos provide other advantages. Since they have mechanical properties similar to lightweigh­t fabrics, they remain functional under bending, folding, twisting, and strains up to about 30 per cent ( which is the typical stretchabi­lity of human skin). They can conform and adhere to highly curved 3D surfaces, like a model of a human brain or a lemon.

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