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Chinese scientists shrink semiconductor chip into fibre as thin as human hair

Advance allows fibres to compute like chips or display information like transistors, paving the way for machine-wearable smart textiles

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A fibre integrated circuit is a novel electronic device that is as thin as a strand of human hair. Photo: Handout
Zhang Tongin Beijing
Chinese scientists have created fully flexible fibre chips with circuits that are integrated and embedded within stretchable strands as thin as human hair at a density rivalling those of a home computer’s central processing unit.

Scientists have now advanced fibre-based electronics that already enable power supply and sensing functions and have spurred the growth of electronic textiles by developing integrated circuits in threadlike form.

This allows the fibres to compute like chips or display information like transistors, effectively enabling machine-washable cloth to work like a computer or television.

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The advance was published in the peer-reviewed journal Nature on Thursday. The study was led by Peng Huisheng, a member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences at Fudan University in Shanghai.

The team developed a novel electronic device named a fibre integrated circuit (FIC). Instead of fabricating circuits on rigid planar substrates, the researchers built functional circuits on an elastic substrate, which was then rolled into a thin fibre resembling a scroll.

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Although as thin as a strand of human hair, the fibre achieves a transistor density of 100,000 per centimetre, meeting the industry standard of traditional very large-scale integration while remaining fully flexible.

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