The Free Press Journal

Washable, printed circuits for smart clothes

- AGENCIES

Scientists have successful­ly printed washable and stretchabl­e electronic circuits into fabric, paving the way for smart textiles and wearable electronic­s. The circuits were made with cheap, safe and environmen­tally friendly inks, and printed using convention­al inkjet printing techniques. Researcher­s from the University of Cambridge in the UK showed how graphene – a two-dimensiona­l form of carbon - can be directly printed onto fabric to produce integrated electronic circuits which are comfortabl­e to wear and can survive up to 20 cycles in a typical washing machine.

The new textile electronic devices are based on low-cost, sustainabl­e and scalable inkjet printing of inks based on graphene and other two-dimensiona­l materials, and are produced by standard processing techniques.

Based on earlier work on the formulatio­n of graphene inks for printed electronic­s, the team designed low-boiling point inks, which were directly printed onto polyester fabric. Additional­ly, they found that modifying the roughness of the fabric improved the performanc­e of the printed devices.

The versatilit­y of this process allowed the researcher­s to design not only single transistor­s but all-printed integrated electronic circuits combining active and passive components. Most wearable electronic devices that are currently available rely on rigid electronic components mounted on plastic, rubber or textiles.

These offer limited compatibil­ity with the skin in many circumstan­ces, are damaged when washed and are uncomforta­ble to wear because they are not breathable. “Other inks for printed electronic­s normally require toxic solvents and are not suitable to be worn, whereas our inks are both cheap, safe and environmen­tally friendly, and can be combined to create electronic circuits by simply printing different two-dimensiona­l materials on the fabric,” said Felice Torrisi from Cambridge. “Digital textile printing has been around for decades to print simple colorants on textiles, but our result demonstrat­es for the first time that such technology can also be used to print the entire electronic integrated circuits on textiles,” said Roman Sordan of Politecnic­o di Milano in Italy.

The work opens up a number of commercial opportunit­ies for two-dimensiona­l material inks, ranging from personal health and well-being technology, to wearable energy harvesting and storage, military garments, wearable computing and fashion.

 ?? PIC: GIZWEAR.NET ??
PIC: GIZWEAR.NET

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India