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Electronics technologies that can physically disappear by dissolution in water or biofluids have broad applications in implantable, environmentally friendly, and hardware‐secure devices. On page 645, J. A. Rogers and co‐workers study the materials science of various metal thin films that can serve as dissolvable conductors in transient electronics. This image shows dissolving thin films of zinc as...
Reactive dissolution and its effects on electrical conduction, morphological change and chemical transformation in thin films of Mg, AZ31B Mg alloy, Zn, Fe, W, and Mo in de‐ionized (DI) water and simulated body fluids (Hanks’ solution pH 5–8) are systematically studied, to assess the potential for use of these metals in water‐soluble, that is, physically "transient", electronics. The results...
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