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Wire can heal itself after being cut

RALEIGH, N.C., Jan. 23 (UPI) -- Researchers at North Carolina State University say they've used liquid metal to create stretchable wires that are self-healing if they are cut.

A stretchable polymer surrounds a conductive core of liquid metal -- an alloy of indium and gallium -- in the elastic wires, and both the liquid-metal core and the polymer sheath can reconnect at the molecular level after being severed, the researchers said.

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"Because we're using liquid metal, these wires have excellent conductive properties," chemical and biomolecular engineering Professor Michael Dickey said. "And because the wires are also elastic and self-healing, they have a lot of potential for use in technologies that could be exposed to high-stress environments."

When the wires are sliced or severed, the liquid metal oxidizes, forming a "skin" that prevents it from leaking out of its sheath. When the severed edges of the wire are placed back together, the liquid metal reconnects and the sheath re-forms its molecular bonds, the researchers said.

"We're also excited about this work because it allows us to create more complex circuits and rewire existing circuits using nothing more than a pair of scissors by cutting and reconfiguring the wires so that they connect in different ways," Dickey said.

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