TY - JOUR
T1 - Getting Under the Sensor's Skin
T2 - The Importance of Electrical Contact Characterization for Conductive Composite Elastomers
AU - Onsager, Claire C.
AU - Rovinsky, Lev
AU - Aygen, Can C.
AU - Cohen, Shira K.
AU - Lachman, Noa
AU - Grayson, Matthew A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Advanced Electronic Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2025/4
Y1 - 2025/4
N2 - Conductive elastomer composites can be used as flexible, lightweight, and inexpensive sensors, but they require ohmic electrical contacts to ensure readout consistency, and such contacts can suffer from hysteresis, non-ohmic behavior, and cyclic fatigue. This work investigates a common cause of non-ohmic conduction in such composite contacts, namely the thin insulating layer native to the surface of most silicone rubber composites that have been infused with multi-walled carbon nanotubes for piezoresistive sensing. Voltage sweep dc measurements of individual contacts on this surface layer behave as parallel head-to-tail diodes with asymmetric hysteresis. Frequency sweep ac measurements quantify the insulator thickness with a leaky capacitor model to be ∼1 µm, independent of nanotube concentration, much thicker than the apparent layer thickness as imaged with scanning electron microscopy. This analysis also confirms highly anisotropic bulk conduction, circa 100 times higher in-plane than cross-plane. To remove the surface layer, a simple surface abrasion is shown to achieve deep ohmic electrical contact to the elastomer bulk. A three-terminal method for verifying ohmic contacts is demonstrated and works even when all contacts are non-ohmic. This three-terminal method be easily applied to other conductive polymers for contact quality-testing.
AB - Conductive elastomer composites can be used as flexible, lightweight, and inexpensive sensors, but they require ohmic electrical contacts to ensure readout consistency, and such contacts can suffer from hysteresis, non-ohmic behavior, and cyclic fatigue. This work investigates a common cause of non-ohmic conduction in such composite contacts, namely the thin insulating layer native to the surface of most silicone rubber composites that have been infused with multi-walled carbon nanotubes for piezoresistive sensing. Voltage sweep dc measurements of individual contacts on this surface layer behave as parallel head-to-tail diodes with asymmetric hysteresis. Frequency sweep ac measurements quantify the insulator thickness with a leaky capacitor model to be ∼1 µm, independent of nanotube concentration, much thicker than the apparent layer thickness as imaged with scanning electron microscopy. This analysis also confirms highly anisotropic bulk conduction, circa 100 times higher in-plane than cross-plane. To remove the surface layer, a simple surface abrasion is shown to achieve deep ohmic electrical contact to the elastomer bulk. A three-terminal method for verifying ohmic contacts is demonstrated and works even when all contacts are non-ohmic. This three-terminal method be easily applied to other conductive polymers for contact quality-testing.
KW - carbon nanotubes
KW - conductive composites
KW - elastomers
KW - electrical measurement
KW - insulating surface layer
KW - ohmic contacts
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105003290671&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/aelm.202400848
DO - 10.1002/aelm.202400848
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AN - SCOPUS:105003290671
SN - 2199-160X
VL - 11
JO - Advanced Electronic Materials
JF - Advanced Electronic Materials
IS - 5
M1 - 2400848
ER -