Electroluminescent Fabric Woven by Ultrastretchable Fibers for Arbitrarily Controllable Pattern Display

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2021 Mar 10;13(9):11260-11267. doi: 10.1021/acsami.0c19743. Epub 2021 Feb 24.

Abstract

Flexible textile displays can be revolutionary for information transmission at any place and any time. Typically, textile displays are fabricated by traditional rigid electronics that sacrifice mechanical flexibility of devices or by flexible electronics that do not have an appropriate choice to arbitrarily control single pixels. This work reports on an electroluminescent fabric woven by ultrastretchable fibers (electroluminescent fibers up to 400% stretch, electrode fibers up to 250% stretch), which can exhibit the pixel-based arbitrarily controllable pattern display by a mobile phone application. To realize ultrastretchability, we made these fibers by encapsulating liquid metals on a polyurethane core (high elasticity). To realize arbitrary control, the design shows a plain-woven structure comprising ZnS-based electroluminescent fibers and perpendicular electrode fibers. The cross-points between the electroluminescent fiber and the electrode fiber form pixels that can be switched on or off independently and can further form the pixel-based arbitrarily controllable pattern display. By doping with different elements, ZnS-based electroluminescent fibers can emit green, blue, or yellow lights. Meanwhile, the fabrication of these fibers employs dip-coating, a scalable manufacturing method without high temperature or vacuum atmosphere. These fabrics show great potential in a wide range of applications such as wearable electronic devices, healthcare, and fashion design.

Keywords: controllable pattern; dip-coating; electroluminescent fiber; fiber-based display; liquid metal.