Publication | Open Access
Inflight fiber printing toward array and 3D optoelectronic and sensing architectures
68
Citations
40
References
2020
Year
EngineeringDevice IntegrationBiomedical EngineeringFiber OpticsFiber-optic CommunicationElectronic DevicesOptical PropertiesPrinted ElectronicsBiomedical DevicesSensing ArchitecturesMaterials SciencePhotonicsWearable ElectronicsFiber Optic SensingOptical Sensors3D PrintingBiomedical SensorsMultimaterial FiberSensorsBiomedical DiagnosticsPss FibersWearable BiosensorsOptoelectronics
Scalability and device integration have been prevailing issues limiting our ability in harnessing the potential of small-diameter conducting fibers. We report inflight fiber printing (iFP), a one-step process that integrates conducting fiber production and fiber-to-circuit connection. Inorganic (silver) or organic {PEDOT:PSS [poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) polystyrene sulfonate]} fibers with 1- to 3-μm diameters are fabricated, with the fiber arrays exhibiting more than 95% transmittance (350 to 750 nm). The high surface area-to-volume ratio, permissiveness, and transparency of the fiber arrays were exploited to construct sensing and optoelectronic architectures. We show the PEDOT:PSS fibers as a cell-interfaced impedimetric sensor, a three-dimensional (3D) moisture flow sensor, and noncontact, wearable/portable respiratory sensors. The capability to design suspended fibers, networks of homo cross-junctions and hetero cross-junctions, and coupling iFP fibers with 3D-printed parts paves the way to additive manufacturing of fiber-based 3D devices with multilatitude functions and superior spatiotemporal resolution, beyond conventional film-based device architectures.
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