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Biologically Safe, Degradable Self-Destruction System for On-Demand, Programmable Transient Electronics

Authors
Shin, Jeong-WoongChoe, Jong ChanLee, Joong HoonHan, Won BaeJang, Tae-MinKo, Gwan-JinYang, Seung MinKim, Yu-GyeongJoo, JaesunLim, Bong HeePark, EunkyoungHwang, Suk-Won
Issue Date
Dec-2021
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Keywords
transient electronics; triggering biosafe; biodegradable; self-destruction
Citation
ACS Nano, v.15, no.12, pp 19310 - 19320
Pages
11
Journal Title
ACS Nano
Volume
15
Number
12
Start Page
19310
End Page
19320
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/sch/handle/2021.sw.sch/20769
DOI
10.1021/acsnano.1c05463
ISSN
1936-0851
1936-086X
Abstract
The lifetime of transient electronic components can be programmed via the use of encapsulation/passivation layers or of on-demand, stimuli-responsive polymers (heat, light, or chemicals), but yet most research is limited to slow dissolution rate, hazardous constituents, or byproducts, or complicated synthesis of reactants. Here we present a physicochemical destruction system with dissolvable, nontoxic materials as an efficient, multipurpose platform, where chemically produced bubbles rapidly collapse device structures and acidic molecules accelerate dissolution of functional traces. Extensive studies of composites based on biodegradable polymers (gelatin and poly-(lactic-co-glycolic acid)) and harmless blowing agents (organic acid and bicarbonate salt) validate the capability for the desired system. Integration with wearable/recyclable electronic components, fast-degradable device layouts, and wireless microfluidic devices highlights potential applicability toward versatile/multifunctional transient systems. In vivo toxicity tests demonstrate biological safety of the proposed system.
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College of Medical Sciences > Department of Biomedical Mechatronics > 1. Journal Articles

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