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Sustainable wood electronics by iron-catalyzed laser-induced graphitization for large-scale applications

Engineering and Technology

Sustainable wood electronics by iron-catalyzed laser-induced graphitization for large-scale applications

C. H. Dreimol, H. Guo, et al.

This groundbreaking study by Christopher H. Dreimol and team reveals the innovative iron-catalyzed laser-induced graphitization (IC-LIG) technique, which fabricates highly conductive structures on wood. From strain sensors to electroluminescent devices, this method unlocks sustainable possibilities in wood electronics.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Ecologically friendly wood electronics will help alleviating the shortcomings of state-of-art cellulose-based “green electronics”. Here we introduce iron-catalyzed laser-induced graphitization (IC-LIG) as an innovative approach for engraving large-scale electrically conductive structures on wood with very high quality and efficiency, overcoming the limitations of conventional LIG including high ablation, thermal damages, need for multiple lasing steps, use of fire retardants and inert atmosphere. An aqueous bio-based coating, inspired by historical iron-gall ink, protects wood from laser ablation and thermal damage while promoting efficient graphitization and smoothening substrate irregularities. Large-scale (100 cm²), highly conductive (≥2500 S m⁻¹) and homogeneous surface areas are engraved single-step in ambient atmosphere with a conventional CO₂ laser, even on very thin (∼450 μm) wood veneers. We demonstrate the validity of our approach by turning wood into highly durable strain sensors, flexible electrodes, capacitive touch panels and an electroluminescent LIG-based device.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jun 17, 2022
Authors
Christopher H. Dreimol, Huizhang Guo, Maximilian Ritter, Tobias Keplinger, Yong Ding, Roman Günther, Erik Poloni, Ingo Burgert, Guido Panzarasa
Tags
iron-catalyzed graphitization
laser-induced graphitization
conductive structures
sustainable electronics
wood materials
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