Wrinkle and crack-dependent charge transport in a uniaxially strained conducting polymer film on a flexible substrate†
Abstract
We investigate charge transport in poly(3,4-ethylene dioxythiophene) polystyrene sulfonate (PEDOT:PSS) films on functionalized polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) substrates under varying uniaxial strain up to 16%. Strong anisotropy in transport is observed at a large applied strain (ε > 4%), which is understood in terms of an extrinsic process, involving a change in density of cracks from a few cracks per mm at ε = 4% to >100 cracks per mm at ε = 16%. The quasi-periodic cracks are aligned perpendicular to the stretching direction. A strain-history dependent response of the resistance of PEDOT:PSS films cycled through a uniaxial strain up to 4% is also observed, for current paths which are both parallel and perpendicular to the direction of stretching. The resistance–strain plots of strained PEDOT:PSS films for the second and subsequent few strain cycles follow the reverse path of the previous strain cycle. This unique strain-history dependence of resistance helps to identify the source of resistance changes at a low strain (ε < 4%). We demonstrate that the out-of-plane uniaxial wrinkle arrays that appear in a direction parallel to stretching have the same hysteresis response as the resistance, and therefore wrinkle formation governs the low-strain resistance changes. These phenomena are extensively investigated with dc-conductivity and frequency-dependent-ac-conductivity measurements, and surface morphological studies of the films under various applied strains. Our work quantitatively identifies the contributions of wrinkles and cracks to the change in resistance of PEDOT:PSS under an applied strain.