Publication

Transient Elastomers with High Dielectric Permittivity for Actuators, Sensors, and Beyond

Holger Frauenrath, Yauhen Sheima
2022
Journal paper
Abstract

Dielectric elastomers (DEs) are key materials in actuators, sensors, energy harvesters, and stretchable electronics. These devices find applications in important emerging fields such as personalized medicine, renewable energy, and soft robotics. However, even after years of research, it is still a great challenge to achieve DEs with increased dielectric permittivity and fast recovery of initial shape when subjected to mechanical and electrical stress. Additionally, high dielectric permittivity elastomers that show reliable performance but disintegrate under normal environmental conditions are not known. Here, we show that polysiloxanes modified with amide groups give elastomers with a dielectric permittivity of 21, which is 7 times higher than regular silicone rubber, a strain at break that can reach 150%, and a mechanical loss factor tan delta below 0.05 at low frequencies. Actuators constructed from these elastomers respond to a low electric field of 6.2 V m(-1), giving reliable lateral actuation of 4% for more than 30 000 cycles at 5 Hz. One survived 450 000 cycles at 10 Hz and 3.6 V m(-1). The best actuator shows 10% lateral strain at 7.5 V m(-1). Capacitive sensors offer a more than a 6-fold increase in sensitivity compared to standard silicone elastomers. The disintegrated material can be re-cross-linked when heated to elevated temperatures. In the future, our material could be used as dielectric in transient actuators, sensors, security devices, and disposable electronic patches for health monitoring.

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Related concepts (32)
Dielectric
In electromagnetism, a dielectric (or dielectric medium) is an electrical insulator that can be polarised by an applied electric field. When a dielectric material is placed in an electric field, electric charges do not flow through the material as they do in an electrical conductor, because they have no loosely bound, or free, electrons that may drift through the material, but instead they shift, only slightly, from their average equilibrium positions, causing dielectric polarisation.
Relative permittivity
The relative permittivity (in older texts, dielectric constant) is the permittivity of a material expressed as a ratio with the electric permittivity of a vacuum. A dielectric is an insulating material, and the dielectric constant of an insulator measures the ability of the insulator to store electric energy in an electrical field. Permittivity is a material's property that affects the Coulomb force between two point charges in the material. Relative permittivity is the factor by which the electric field between the charges is decreased relative to vacuum.
Permittivity
In electromagnetism, the absolute permittivity, often simply called permittivity and denoted by the Greek letter ε (epsilon), is a measure of the electric polarizability of a dielectric. A material with high permittivity polarizes more in response to an applied electric field than a material with low permittivity, thereby storing more energy in the material. In electrostatics, the permittivity plays an important role in determining the capacitance of a capacitor.
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