You only need to know that flat screen monitors had a typical seventy
percent failure rate to appreciate the importance of this methodology. It wa the primary reason that the initial
cost was so high and I am sure it remains a major cost factor.
It that loss factor can be slashed; we will quickly see the large
dimension screens drop in price while also making the holodeck wall almost
practical. A three D space is soon going
to be a technically credible target.
Beyond that it makes physically robust circuits possible as they are
needed and the change out option is not quite so important although it imposed
a discipline to engineering that I think is and was valuble.
Self-healing electronics could work
longer and reduce waste
by Liz Ahlberg, Physical Sciences Editor for
Self-healing electronics. Microcapsules full of liquid metal sit atop a
gold circuit. When the circuit is broken, the microcapsules rupture, filling in
the crack and restoring the circuit. Graphic by Scott White.
When one tiny circuit
within an integrated chip cracks or fails, the whole chip - or even the whole
device - is a loss. But what if it could fix itself, and fix itself so fast
that the user never knew there was a problem?
A team of University of Illinois engineers has developed a
self-healing system that restores electrical conductivity to a cracked circuit
in less time than it takes to blink. Led by aerospace engineering professor
Scott White and materials science and engineering professor Nancy Sottos, the
researchers published their results in the journal Advanced Materials.
"It simplifies
the system," said chemistry professor Jeffrey Moore, a co-author of the
paper. "Rather than having to build in redundancies or to build in a
sensory diagnostics system, this material is designed to take care of the
problem itself."
As electronic devices
are evolving to perform more sophisticated tasks, manufacturers are packing as
much density onto a chip as possible. However, such density compounds
reliability problems, such as failure stemming from fluctuating temperature
cycles as the device operates or fatigue. A failure at any point in the circuit
can shut down the whole device.
"In general
there's not much avenue for manual repair," Sottos said. "Sometimes
you just can't get to the inside. In a multilayer integrated circuit, there's
no opening it up. Normally you just replace the whole chip. It's true for a
battery too. You can't pull a battery apart and try to find the source of the
failure."
Most consumer devices
are meant to be replaced with some frequency, adding to electronic waste
issues, but in many important applications - such as instruments or vehicles
for space or military functions - electrical failures cannot be replaced or
repaired.
The Illinois team previously developed a system
for self-healing polymer materials and decided to adapt their technique for
conductive systems.
They dispersed tiny
microcapsules, as small as 10 microns in diameter, on top of a gold line
functioning as a circuit. As a crack propagates, the microcapsules break open
and release the liquid metal contained inside. The liquid metal fills in the
gap in the circuit, restoring electrical flow.
"What's really
cool about this paper is it's the first example of taking the
microcapsule-based healing approach and applying it to a new function,"
White said.
"Everything prior
to this has been on structural repair. This is on conductivity restoration. It
shows the concept translates to other things as well."
A failure interrupts
current for mere microseconds as the liquid metal immediately fills the crack.
The researchers demonstrated that 90 percent of their samples healed to 99
percent of original conductivity, even with a small amount of microcapsules.
The self-healing
system also has the advantages of being localized and autonomous. Only the
microcapsules that a crack intercepts are opened, so repair only takes place at
the point of damage.
Furthermore, it
requires no human intervention or diagnostics, a boon for applications where
accessing a break for repair is impossible, such as a battery, or finding the
source of a failure is difficult, such as an air- or spacecraft.
"In an aircraft,
especially a defense-based aircraft, there are miles and miles of conductive
wire," Sottos said. "You don't often know where the break occurs. The
autonomous part is nice - it knows where it broke, even if we don't."
Next, the researchers
plan to further refine their system and explore other possibilities for using
microcapsules to control conductivity. They are particularly interested in
applying the microcapsule-based self-healing system to batteries, improving
their safety and longevity.
This research was
supported as part of the Center for Electrical Energy Storage, an Energy Frontier
Research Center
funded by the U.S.
Department of Energy, Office of Science. Moore, Sottos and White are also
affiliated with the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology at
the U. of I. Co-authors of the paper included
postdoctoral researchers Benjamin Blaiszik and Sharlotte Kramer and graduate
students Martha Grady and David McIlroy.
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