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Making waves.


Flexible silicon is no longer an oxymoron. Scientists have created thin, wavy silicon ribbons that stretch along with their rubber backing. The technique could lead to comfortable, sensor-filled uniforms that monitor a soldier's vital signs or to electric devices that can wrap around complex shapes such as aircraft wings.

Fashioning a rigid material such as silicon into a thin film can make it bendable but not stretchable, says materials scientist John A. Rogers

Education

John Rogers is a physical chemist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. John A. Rogers obtained BA and BS degrees in chemistry and in physics from the University of Texas, Austin, in 1989.
 of the University of Illinois University of Illinois may refer to:
  • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (flagship campus)
  • University of Illinois at Chicago
  • University of Illinois at Springfield
  • University of Illinois system
It can also refer to:
, at Urbana-Champaign. Rogers' team uncovered silicon's flexible nature by accident, he says.

A lab member inadvertently stretched the rubber stamp used to apply thin silicon strips to a plastic backing. When the rubber snapped back, the silicon ribbons buckled along their lengths into a rippled shape. These strips turned out to be 10 to 20 times as stretchy stretch·y  
adj. stretch·i·er, stretch·i·est
1. Capable of being stretched: a stretchy fabric.

2. Tending to stretch excessively.

Adj. 1.
 as rigid silicon is.

The ribbons expand and compress much as an accordion accordion, musical instrument consisting of a rectangular bellows expanded and contracted between the hands. Buttons or keys operated by the player open valves, allowing air to enter or to escape. The air sets in motion free reeds, frequently made of metal.  bellow bellow

one of the voices of cattle. Usually refers to the arrogant call of the bull used to announce territorial rights. Abnormalities of the voice include hoarseness as in rabies, or continuous repetition as in nervous acetonemia. See also low, moo.
 might, notes Rogers. His team makes them in thicknesses ranging from 20 to 200 nanometers, widths of a few micrometers, and lengths up to an inch.

To make devices such as transistors and diodes out of the flexible material, the researchers added components such as conductors to thin strips of silicon on a wafer. Then, they transferred the device onto a uniformly stretched rubber backing and released the rubber's strain to introduce waves. The device's electrical properties withstood 100 cycles of stretching and compression, the group reports in the Jan. 13 Science.

Rogers says that the team is now working on squares of silicon that give in two directions, and the researchers are investigating how they might increase silicon's stretchiness Noun 1. stretchiness - the capacity for being stretched
stretchability, stretch

elasticity, snap - the tendency of a body to return to its original shape after it has been stretched or compressed; "the waistband had lost its snap"
 by an additional factor of 10.--A.C.
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Title Annotation:MATERIALS SCIENCE
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Jan 21, 2006
Words:278
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