Ultra-Long Carbon Nanotubes-Based Flexible Transparent Heaters
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Transparent conductive materials (TCMs) are essential for optoelectrical devices ranging from smart windows and defogging films to soft sensors, display technologies, and flexible electronics. Materials, such as indium tin oxide (ITO) and silver nanowires (AgNWs), are commonly used and offer high optical transmittance and electrical conductivity, but suffer from brittleness, oxidation susceptibility, and require high-cost materials, greatly limiting their use. Carbon nanotube (CNT) networks provide a promising alternative, featuring mechanical compliance, chemical robustness, and scalable processing. This study reports an aqueous ink formulation composed of ultra-long mix-walled carbon nanotubes (UL-CNTs), compatible with the flow coating process, yielding uniform transparent conductive films (TCFs) on polyethylene terephthalate (PET), glass, and polycarbonate (PC). The resulting films exhibit tunable transmittance (85%–88% for single layers; ~57% for three layers at 550 nm) and sheet resistance of 7.5 kΩ/□ to 1.5 kΩ/□ accordingly. These TCFs maintain stable sheet resistance for over 5000 bending cycles and show excellent mechanical durability with negligible effects on heating performance. Post-deposition treatments, including nitric acid vapor doping or flash photonic heating (FPH), further reduce sheet resistance by up to 80% (7.5 kΩ/□ to 1.2 kΩ/□). X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) results in reduced surface oxygen content after FPH. The photonic-treated heaters attain ~100 °C within 20 s at 100 V. This scalable, water-based process provides a pathway toward low-cost, flexible, and stretchable devices in a variety of fields, including printed electronics, optoelectronics, and thermal actuators.