This Liquid Metal Could Transform Soft Electronics
Bend it. Stretch it. Use it to conduct electricity. Researchers are exploring a range of applications that harness galliums unusual properties
Kurt Kleiner, Knowable Magazine
May 6, 2022
The metal gallium becomes a liquid at slightly above room temperature, one of its many remarkable properties that researchers are investigating. Feature China/Future Publishing via Getty Images
Every time you sit down with your phone in your back pocket, youre reminded of a fundamental truth: Human bodies are soft and flexible. Electronics arent.
But soon there may be devices that can stretch, bend and even repair themselves when theyre damaged. By harnessing the unusual properties of a liquid metal called gallium, materials scientists aim to create a new generation of flexible devices for virtual reality interfaces, medical monitors, motion-sensing devices and more.
The goal is to take the functionality of electronics and make them softer, says Michael Dickey, a chemical engineer at North Carolina State University. I mean, the body and other natural systems have figured out how to do it. So surely, we can do it.
Bendable electronics can also be made with conventional metals. But solid metal can fatigue and break, and the more thats added to a soft material, the more inflexible the material becomes. Liquid metals dont have that problem, Dickey says they can be bent, stretched and twisted with little or no damage.
More:
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/innovation/this-liquid-metal-could-transform-soft-electronics-180980043/