Ultrathin, soft, radiative cooling interfaces for advanced thermal management in skin electronics

Author:

Li Jiyu12ORCID,Fu Yang3,Zhou Jingkun12ORCID,Yao Kuanming1ORCID,Ma Xue3,Gao Shouwei4ORCID,Wang Zuankai4ORCID,Dai Jian-Guo5ORCID,Lei Dangyuan3ORCID,Yu Xinge12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.

2. Hong Kong Center for Cerebra-Cardiovascular Health Engineering, Hong Kong Science Park, New Territories 999077, Hong Kong, China.

3. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, The Hong Kong Institute of Clean Energy, City University of Hong Kong, 83 Tat Chee Avenue, Hong Kong, China.

4. Department of Mechanical Engineering, City University of Hong Kong, Kowloon, Hong Kong, China.

5. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, China.

Abstract

Thermal management plays a notable role in electronics, especially for the emerging wearable and skin electronics, as the level of integration, multifunction, and miniaturization of such electronics is determined by thermal management. Here, we report a generic thermal management strategy by using an ultrathin, soft, radiative-cooling interface (USRI), which allows cooling down the temperature in skin electronics through both radiative and nonradiative heat transfer, achieving temperature reduction greater than 56°C. The light and intrinsically flexible nature of the USRI enables its use as a conformable sealing layer and hence can be readily integrated with skin electronics. Demonstrations include passive cooling down of Joule heat for flexible circuits, improving working efficiency for epidermal electronics, and stabling performance outputs for skin-interfaced wireless photoplethysmography sensors. These results offer an alternative pathway toward achieving effective thermal management in advanced skin-interfaced electronics for multifunctionally and wirelessly operated health care monitoring.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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