Chinese researchers have unveiled a significant advance in electronics with the creation of fiber chips, integrated circuits embedded within ultrathin flexible fibers that can compute, communicate, and be woven into fabrics or high-tech devices. Published in Nature, this breakthrough represents a departure from traditional rigid silicon chips, offering the potential to accelerate integration of computing into wearable systems, medical devices, and human-machine interfaces. The research team, led by Peng Huisheng from Fudan University in Shanghai and Chinese Academy of Sciences, spent nearly a decade developing fibers thinner than a human hair that combine processing, memory, and signal-handling circuitry.
The team achieved transistor densities of approximately 100,000 per centimeter, a performance level comparable to conventional electronic chips, while maintaining full flexibility, stretchability, and resilience under deformation. Unlike traditional planar chips, these fiber chips incorporate a multilayered architecture with circuitry embedded throughout the fiber rather than only on its surface. Using nanometer-smooth polymer substrates rolled into spiral configurations, researchers overcame longstanding challenges in fitting high-precision microelectronics onto flexible materials. Laboratory tests demonstrated that the fibers can handle digital and analog signal processing as well as neural computing functions with high accuracy.
Prototypes showed impressive durability, surviving repeated bending, twisting, and abrasion, making them suitable for integration into textiles, wearable systems, or soft robotic components. A single one-meter fiber can contain millions of transistors, approaching the capabilities of conventional computer CPUs. The fibers can stretch up to 30 percent, twist at 180 degrees per centimeter, endure over 100 wash cycles, tolerate temperatures up to 100 degrees Celsius, and withstand the weight of a 15.6-tonne container truck. Power supply, sensing, computing, and display functions have been successfully integrated into a single self-sufficient fiber, removing the need for external chips or wiring in smart clothing applications.
Researchers note that the fabrication method is compatible with existing industrial lithography tools, suggesting that mass production could be feasible. Over the last ten years, the team has developed more than 30 types of functional fiber devices, including fibers for energy storage, power generation, light emission, displays, and biosensing. The research demonstrates the potential to scale production and integrate fiber chips into advanced applications such as brain-computer interfaces, smart textiles, and virtual reality wearables. Scientists believe that this flexible fiber platform could serve as the foundation for intelligent interactive systems, offering new pathways for wearable electronics, medical monitoring devices, and broader Internet of Things applications.
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