Explore the most recent editions of MPO Magazine, featuring expert commentary, industry trends, and breakthrough technologies.
Access the full digital version of MPO Magazine anytime, anywhere, with interactive content and enhanced features.
Join our community of medical device professionals. Subscribe to MPO Magazine for the latest news and updates delivered straight to your mailbox.
Explore the transformative impact of additive manufacturing on medical devices, including design flexibility and materials.
Learn about outsourcing options in the medical device sector, focusing on quality, compliance, and operational excellence.
Stay updated on the latest electronic components and technologies driving innovation in medical devices.
Discover precision machining and laser processing solutions that enhance the quality and performance of medical devices.
Explore the latest materials and their applications in medical devices, focusing on performance, biocompatibility, and regulatory compliance.
Learn about advanced molding techniques for producing high-quality, complex medical device components.
Stay informed on best practices for packaging and sterilization methods that ensure product safety and compliance.
Explore the latest trends in research and development, as well as design innovations that drive the medical device industry forward.
Discover the role of software and IT solutions in enhancing the design, functionality, and security of medical devices.
Learn about the essential testing methods and standards that ensure the safety and effectiveness of medical devices.
Stay updated on innovations in tubing and extrusion processes for medical applications, focusing on precision and reliability.
Stay ahead with real-time updates on critical news affecting the medical device industry.
Access unique content and insights not available in the print edition of the MPO Magazine.
Explore feature articles that delve into specific topics within the medical device industry, providing in-depth analysis and insights.
Gain perspective from industry experts through regular columns addressing key challenges and innovations in medical devices.
Read the editor’s thoughts on the current state of the medical device industry.
Discover the leading companies in the medical device sector, showcasing their innovations and contributions to the industry.
Explore detailed profiles of medical device contract manufacturing and service provider companies, highlighting their capabilities and offerings.
Learn about the capabilities of medical device contract manufacturing and service provider companies, showcasing their expertise and resources.
Watch informative videos featuring industry leaders discussing trends, technologies, and insights in medical devices.
Short, engaging videos providing quick insights and updates on key topics within the medical device industry.
Tune in to discussions with industry experts sharing their insights on trends, challenges, and innovations in the medical device sector.
Participate in informative webinars led by industry experts, covering various topics relevant to the medical device sector.
Stay informed on the latest press releases and announcements from leading companies in the medical device manufacturing industry.
Access comprehensive eBooks covering a range of topics on medical device manufacturing, design, and innovation.
Highlighting the innovators and entrepreneurs who are shaping the future of medical technology.
Explore sponsored articles and insights from leading companies in the medical device manufacturing sector.
Read in-depth whitepapers that explore key issues, trends, and research findings for the medical device industry.
Discover major industry events, trade shows, and conferences focused on medical devices and technology.
Get real-time updates and insights live from the CompaMed/Medica conference floor.
Join discussions and networking opportunities at the MPO Medtech Forum, focusing on the latest trends and challenges in the industry.
Attend the MPO Summit for insights and strategies from industry leaders shaping the future of medical devices.
Participate in the ODT Forum, focusing on orthopedic device trends and innovations.
Discover advertising opportunities with MPO to reach a targeted audience of medical device professionals.
Review our editorial guidelines for submissions and contributions to MPO.
Read about our commitment to protecting your privacy and personal information.
Familiarize yourself with the terms and conditions governing the use of MPOmag.com.
What are you searching for?
Kirigami-style slits in stretchy films for bandages, heat pads & wearable electronics that adhere to flexible surfaces.
March 28, 2018
By: Jennifer Chu
MIT News Office
Scraped up knees and elbows are tricky places to securely apply a bandage. More often than not, the adhesive will peel away from the skin with just a few bends of the affected joint. Now MIT engineers have come up with a stickier solution, in the form of a thin, lightweight, rubber-like film. The adhesive film can stick to highly deformable regions of the body, such as the knee and elbow, and maintain its hold even after 100 bending cycles. The key to the film’s clinginess is a pattern of slits that the researchers have cut into the film, similar to the cuts made in a paper-folding art form known as kirigami. The researchers attached the “kirigami film” to a volunteer’s knee and found that each time she bent her knee, the film’s slits opened at the center, in the region of the knee with the most pronounced bending, while the slits at the edges remained closed, allowing the film to remain bonded to the skin. The kirigami cuts give the film not only stretch, but also better grip: The cuts that open release tension that would otherwise cause the entire film to peel away from the skin. To demonstrate potential applications, the group fabricated a kirigami-patterned adhesive bandage, as well as a heat pad consisting of a kirigami film threaded with heating wires. With the application of a 3-volt power supply, the pad maintains a steady temperature of 100 degrees Fahrenheit. The group has also engineered a wearable electronic film outfitted with light-emitting diodes. All three films can function and stick to the skin, even after 100 knee bends. Ruike Zhao, a postdoc in MIT’s Department of Mechanical Engineering, said kirigami-patterned adhesives may enable a whole swath of products, from everyday medical bandages to wearable and soft electronics. “Currently in the soft electronics field, people mostly attach devices to regions with small deformations, but not in areas with large deformations such as joint regions, because they would detach,” Ruike said. “I think kirigami film is one solution to this problem commonly found in adhesives and soft electronics.” Ruike is the lead author of a paper published online this month in the journal Soft Matter. Her co-authors are graduate students Shaoting Lin and Hyunwoo Yuk, along with Xuanhe Zhao, the Noyce Career Development Professor in MIT’s Department of Mechanical Engineering. Small, “kirigami” slits in polymer film enable the material to stick to the skin, even after 100 knee bends, compared to the same film without slits, which debonds after just one bending cycle. Adhesion from an Art Form In August 2016, Ruike and her colleagues were approached by representatives from a medical supply company in China, who asked the group to develop an improved version of a popular pain-relieving bandage that the company currently manufactures. “Adhesives like these bandages are very commonly used in our daily life, but when you try to attach them to places that encounter large, inhomogenous bending motion, like elbows and knees, they usually detach,” Ruike said. “It’s a huge problem for the company, which they asked us to solve.” The team considered kirigami as a potential solution. Originally an Asian folk art, kirigami is the practice of cutting intricate patterns into paper and folding this paper, much like origami, to create beautiful, elaborate three-dimensional structures. More recently, some scientists have been exploring kirigami as a way to develop new, functional materials. “In most cases, people make cuts in a structure to make it stretchable,” Ruike said. “But we are the first group to find, with a systematic mechanism study, that a kirigami design can improve a material’s adhesion.” The researchers fabricated thin kirigami films by pouring a liquid elastomer, or rubber solution, into 3D-printed molds. Each mold was printed with rows of offset grooves of various spacings, which the researchers then filled with the rubber solution. Once cured and lifted out of the molds, the thin elastomer layers were studded with rows of offset slits. The researchers say the film can be made from a wide range of materials, from soft polymers to hard metal sheets. Ruike applied a thin adhesive coating, similar to what is applied to bandages, to each film before attaching it to a volunteer’s knee. She took note of each film’s ability to stick to the knee after repeated bending, compared with an elastomer film that had no kirigami patterns. After just one cycle, the plain, continuous film quickly detached, whereas the kirigami film maintained its hold, even after 100 knee bends. A Balance in Design To find out why kirigami cuts enhance a material’s adhesive properties, the researchers first bonded a kirigami film to a polymer surface, then subjected the material to stretch tests. They measured the amount of stretch a kirigami film can undergo before peeling away from the polymer surface—a measurement they used to calculate the material’s critical “energy-release rate,” a quantity to evaluate detaching. They found that this energy-release rate varied throughout a single film: When they pulled the film from either end like an accordion, the slits toward the middle exhibited a higher energy-release rate and were first to peel open under less stretch. In contrast, the slits at either end of the film continued to stick to the underlying surface and remained closed. The researchers stretched kirigami films and measured their “energy release rate,” or the critical amount of stretch a film can handle before peeling away from its surface. Through these experiments, Ruike identified three main parameters that give kirigami films their adhesive properties: shear-lag, in which shear deformation of film can reduce the strain on other parts of the film; partial debonding, in which the film segments around an open slit maintain a partial bond to the underlying surface; and inhomogenous deformation, in which a film can maintain its overall adhesion, even as parts of its underlying surface may bend and stretch more than others. Depending on the application, Ruike said researchers can use the team’s findings as a design blueprint to identify the best pattern of cuts and the optimal balance of the three parameters, for a given application. “These three parameters will help guide the design of soft, advanced materials,” Ruike said. “You can always design other patterns, just like folk art. There are so many solutions that we can think of. Just follow the mechanical guidance for an optimized design, and you can achieve a lot of things.” Ruike and her colleagues have filed a patent on their technique and are continuing to collaborate with the medical supply company, which is currently making plans to manufacture medicine patches made from kirigami films. “They make this pain-relieving pad that’s pretty popular in China—even my parents use it,” Ruike said. “So it’s super exciting.” The team is now branching out to explore other materials on which to pattern kirigami cuts. “The current films are purely elastomers,” Ruike said. “We want to change the film material to gels, which can directly diffuse medicine into the skin. That’s our next step.” This research was supported, in part, by the National Science Foundation and the Tibet Cheezheng Tibetan Medicine Co. Ltd.
Enter your account email.
A verification code was sent to your email, Enter the 6-digit code sent to your mail.
Didn't get the code? Check your spam folder or resend code
Set a new password for signing in and accessing your data.
Your Password has been Updated !