New Connections For Stretchable, Twistable Electronics 60
tugfoigel writes "Jizhou Song, a professor in the University of Miami College of Engineering and his collaborators Professor John Rogers, at the University of Illinois and Professor Yonggang Huang, at Northwestern University have developed a new design for stretchable electronics that can be wrapped around complex shapes, without a reduction in electronic function. The new mechanical design strategy is based on semiconductor nanomaterials that can offer high stretchability (e.g., 140%) and large twistability such as corkscrew twists with tight pitch (e.g., 90 degrees in 1 cm). Potential uses for the new design include electronic devices for eye cameras, smart surgical gloves, body parts, airplane wings, back planes for liquid crystal displays and biomedical devices."
Devices (Score:1, Informative)
not devises.
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No, Devizes [google.co.uk]. A small English town well-known for its high population of bioscientists :)
For every day purposes (Score:5, Funny)
Does this make it less likely that my headphone wires won't automatically seek to form the most complex DNA strands in the universe?
Re:For every day purposes (Score:5, Funny)
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Serously - why did the above get modded as a troll?
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No, but there's a simple solution to that: stop wrapping your headphone wires around histones.
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Hey, the nerdliest of headphone designers may make great sound, but their options for replicating their DNA leave them limited to the more eccentric solutions.
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One size (Score:1)
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What you need is a stuff bag, something I had the idea for after reading this:
http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=401814&cid=21857590 [slashdot.org]
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Here's some advice for you: The quote is:
Leave the gun; take the cannoli
No true Italian says "cannolis"
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Those homonyms are a bitch aren't they?
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In other words you want them to skip all the intermediate stages of development and go right to the end. Hmm... that actually does sound pretty good.
Attention everyone: notify me when they've cured cancer, figured out if global warming is real or a hoax (and if real have solved it), and they have MP3s that are thin as a card and rollable. Until then, I'm going to be pouting in my room.
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I don't know about you, but my MP3's are already microscopically thin (the width of the bits on the platter)
Well, make it able to be rolled, cure cancer, and that global warming thing, and I might come out.
I did mean MP3 player I think...
and the makers of (Score:2, Funny)
pornographic fetishware rejoiced
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Ah have no fear, stupid people will find the devices to hard to use. and will continue to breed like jack rabbits.
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Someone will use it to try to create Terry McGinnis' Batsuit [wikipedia.org].
This'll fix coiled cables? (Score:2, Interesting)
Shouldn't this be used for every type of cables? During the last couple of weeks, coiled USB cables have given me lots of grief. USB connected camera stands (used for passport pictures) keep being disconnected, but as soon as the cable has been straightened (5 meters), everything's fine.
Recently I had the same problem with a Cat5e cable at some other place; 5 meters, half of that from the IP phone to the wall; as soon as I straightened it up, the phone was able to connect.
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Recently I had the same problem with a Cat5e cable at some other place; 5 meters, half of that from the IP phone to the wall; as soon as I straightened it up, the phone was able to connect.
That's because the 1's get stuck in the turns but the 0's make it through just fine...
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Come on, no need to be so technically inaccurate in a forum like this! Inverted signaling is used, so it's the 0s that get stuck, and the 1s that get through without problem. Sheesh.
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An Intellectual Property phone? :cool:
Got Beckerman on speed-dial or something?
Also, Valenti & co - making crank calls is good way to bust stress if you manage to mask your caller-ID. Not that I would *know* about any of *that*.
Makes the space station wheel more likely. (Score:3, Interesting)
I thought one of the deals holding up the big wheel spinning in space for artificial gravity - like the station in 2001 A Space Odyssey was connections between the core and the spinning part. Maybe somehow this will help.
Why this is important research (Score:4, Insightful)
Consider that it is somewhat easier to print your circuitry in two dimensions, then to fold it up very small.
This is also helpful for making of smart materials, for example it'd be no use having a smart skin for a aircraft if fatigue and deformation destroys the circuitry within it.
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...because it's awfully hard to dock to a rotating station...
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The best way to make the wheel spin, without spinning the rest of the station, is using jets of something like air instead of a motor.
I disagree. I would spin two wheels in opposite directions such that the momentum would cancel out.
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Right, a material that can stretch is going to be real useful in connecting to wires between a "stationary" object and an object spinning in multiple revolutions around said stationary object. Just like a rubberband on a toy airplane can stretch infinitely without breaking. Ugh.
NASA has known how to create AG at least 1952. A space craft designed to do this was to launch in 1977, but that program got scrapped. It is possible to created a spinning wheel around a stationary object. In fact you're using severa
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
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The wi-fi slinky – so easy to use, even grandma's getting in on the fun!
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I'll have to go buy an old-school Slinky or two and play with it.
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So this means I can finally be Dr. Octopus (Score:2, Funny)
In Ken Macleod's "Newton's Wake"... (Score:2, Informative)
...a character has a pocket-sized screen that he enlarges by _stretching_ it. I think of this when browsing the Web on a mobile, especially iPhone-like devices with their stretching fingers-metaphor.
Stretchable slow electronics (Score:1, Informative)
The length of a wire is limited by the wavelength of the signal it must pass. The rule of thumb is that any conductor longer than 1% of that wavelength must be treated as a transmission line. A transmission line depends on its physical properties. If any of those properties changes then the characteristic impedance of the cable changes. When that happens, signals no longer pass as they should, they distort and reflect and generally provide misery.
With the above in mind, my WAG is that the clock rate of
Shock proof? (Score:1)
What cellphone (Score:2)
What cell phone do you use? I have a cheap Nokia GSM phone - it's got a black & white screen,
no camera, no radio, no music player.
It's 2 years old - fallen on hard ground multiple times.
It's even fallen into a bucket of water ones.
It's working fine. Doesn't shutdown or malfunction.
Grammar Nazi (Score:2, Informative)
Tattoos! (Score:2)
e-newspapers? (Score:1)
Take a flexible OLED, back it with this flexible circuitry, add a flexible battery and you've got an electronic material which could really give paper a run for it's money. Is there flexible memory or storage yet?
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Well, I don't know about run for it's money. Can it be made cheaper than paper?
*That* is the true test.