[go: up one dir, main page]
More Web Proxy on the site http://driver.im/

Yin et al., 2018 - Google Patents

Splash-resistant and light-weight silk-sheathed wires for textile electronics

Yin et al., 2018

View PDF
Document ID
14801802722499416328
Author
Yin Z
Jian M
Wang C
Xia K
Liu Z
Wang Q
Zhang M
Wang H
Liang X
Liang X
Long Y
Yu X
Zhang Y
Publication year
Publication venue
Nano letters

External Links

Snippet

Silk has outstanding mechanical properties and biocompatibility. It has been used to fabricate traditional textiles for thousands of years and can be produced in large scale. Silk materials are potentially attractive in modern textile electronics. However, silk is not …
Continue reading at m08.iphy.ac.cn (PDF) (other versions)

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
Yin et al. Splash-resistant and light-weight silk-sheathed wires for textile electronics
Ma et al. From molecular reconstruction of mesoscopic functional conductive silk fibrous materials to remote respiration monitoring
Wang et al. Silk-based advanced materials for soft electronics
Lu et al. High-performance stretchable conductive composite fibers from surface-modified silver nanowires and thermoplastic polyurethane by wet spinning
Gao et al. Winding-locked carbon nanotubes/polymer nanofibers helical yarn for ultrastretchable conductor and strain sensor
Afroj et al. Engineering graphene flakes for wearable textile sensors via highly scalable and ultrafast yarn dyeing technique
Hu et al. Biodegradable, super-strong, and conductive cellulose macrofibers for fabric-based triboelectric nanogenerator
Shin et al. Highly electroconductive and mechanically strong Ti3C2T x MXene fibers using a deformable MXene gel
Ahmed et al. Recent advances in 2D MXene integrated smart-textile interfaces for multifunctional applications
Ma et al. Multiresponsive MXene (Ti3C2T x)-decorated textiles for wearable thermal management and human motion monitoring
Wang et al. Self-derived superhydrophobic and multifunctional polymer sponge composite with excellent joule heating and photothermal performance for strain/pressure sensors
Ding et al. Scalable and facile preparation of highly stretchable electrospun PEDOT: PSS@ PU fibrous nonwovens toward wearable conductive textile applications
Wu et al. From mesoscopic functionalization of silk fibroin to smart fiber devices for textile electronics and photonics
Song et al. Silk-inspired stretchable fiber-shaped supercapacitors with ultrahigh volumetric capacitance and energy density for wearable electronics
Wang et al. Ultratough bioinspired graphene fiber via sequential toughening of hydrogen and ionic bonding
Li et al. Highly aligned cellulose/polypyrrole composite nanofibers via electrospinning and in situ polymerization for anisotropic flexible strain sensor
Zhang et al. Core-spun carbon nanotube yarn supercapacitors for wearable electronic textiles
Darabi et al. Green conducting cellulose yarns for machine-sewn electronic textiles
Nie et al. Stretchable one-dimensional conductors for wearable applications
Tebyetekerwa et al. Surface self-assembly of functional electroactive nanofibers on textile yarns as a facile approach toward super flexible energy storage
Xing et al. Silk-based flexible electronics and smart wearable Textiles: Progress and beyond
He et al. Graphene-fiber-based supercapacitors favor N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone/ethyl acetate as the spinning solvent/coagulant combination
Yin et al. Electronic fibers/textiles for health‐monitoring: fabrication and application
Jiang et al. Durable and Wearable Self-powered Temperature Sensor Based on Self-healing Thermoelectric Fiber by Coaxial Wet Spinning Strategy for Fire Safety of Firefighting Clothing
Fu et al. Cation-induced assembly of conductive MXene fibers for wearable heater, wireless communication, and stem cell differentiation