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Stretchable waveguides maintain stable transmission even when bent or twisted

30 September 2025

Stretchable waveguides maintain stable transmission even when bent or twisted

Advance in flexible surface plasmonic waveguides opens the door to smart wearables

WASHINGTON — Researchers have designed and demonstrated stretchable waveguides that maintain efficient, stable signal transmission of surface plasmon polaritons even when bent, twisted or stretched. These plasmonic waveguides could make it possible to seamlessly embed advanced sensing, communication and health monitoring functions into everyday wearable materials.

Rubidium transition

Caption: Researchers designed and fabricated elastic spoof surface plasmonic waveguides, which fully recover their original size and shape after being stretched and maintain efficient, stable signal transmission even when bent or twisted.

Credit: Zuojia Wang, Zhejiang University

Plasmonic waveguides are tiny structures that guide light by coupling it with electrons on a metal surface. The new flexible waveguides transmit what are known as spoof surface plasmon polaritons, which are formed with longer wavelengths — radio frequencies in this case —   rather than the conventional infrared or visible light.

“Although our work is still at the research stage, it highlights the exciting possibility of merging advanced electromagnetic technologies with soft, stretchable materials,” said research team leader Zuojia Wang from Zhejiang University. “This brings us closer to a future where advanced healthcare and connectivity are integrated into what we wear.”

In the journal Optical Materials Express, the researchers describe their elastic spoof surface plasmonic waveguides, which fully recover their original size and shape after being stretched. They experimentally show that the waveguides achieve stable signal transmission with high efficiency and strong electromagnetic energy confinement even when stretched or bent.

“Stretchable plasmonic waveguides could one day be integrated into wearable and textile-based devices that monitor vital signs, support wireless communication or enable unobtrusive health tracking,” said Wang. “This technology might also eventually contribute to more comfortable, reliable and body-compatible electronics — such as smart clothing for continuous medical monitoring, soft communication devices for emergencies or flexible interfaces that connect humans with machines and robots.”

Bendable waveguides

Compared to their infrared and visible counterparts, spoof surface plasmons are easier to integrate with electronics, can enable smaller devices, and can better penetrate materials like plastics and clothing. Although this has made them attractive for textile-based sensing, it has been difficult to create stretchable conductive materials capable of generating and controlling these plasmons.

Rubidium transition

Caption: The waveguides could enable a variety of wearable devices for health monitoring and other applications.
Credit: Zuojia Wang, Zhejiang University

To overcome this limitation, the researchers developed a new design that helically winds deformable metallic wires onto thermoplastic polyurethane to create flexible waveguides. This approach provides both elastic recovery and excellent compatibility with fabric and skin. The design also improves mechanical stability compared to other stretchable substrates by reducing lateral strain during longitudinal stretching.

“Our work demonstrates that plasmonic waveguides can be designed with inherent stretchability while still maintaining robust electromagnetic performance,” said Wang. “Beyond fundamental plasmonics, this approach could enable adaptive wireless communication, body-compatible sensors and conformal devices that seamlessly interface with biological tissues or dynamic surfaces.”

Signals that stretch

To experimentally validate the plasmonic waveguides, the researchers fabricated prototypes and measured their electric field distributions while connected to specialized test equipment.

The experiments showed that the waveguides could stretch up to 50% without changing width (zero Poisson’s ratio) and that signal transmission varied by no more than 10% when stretched. The waveguides also continued to transmit efficiently even when bent or twisted.

The researchers are now integrating these waveguides into a chest strap prototype that uses electromagnetic metafabric to detect human heartbeats. They also plan to explore advanced textile techniques, incorporating finer microstructures — such as microknots and helical microwires — to enhance the mechanical performance of smart textile systems.

Paper: Z. Zheng, X. Yao, L. Jing, Z. Wang. “Quasi-one-dimensional elastic and stretchable spoof surface plasmonic waveguide with zero Poisson’s ratio,” Opt. Mater. Express 15, 2607-2616 (2025).

DOI: 10.1364/OME.572863.

About Optica Publishing Group

Optica Publishing Group is a division of the society, Optica, Advancing Optics and Photonics Worldwide. It publishes the largest collection of peer-reviewed and most-cited content in optics and photonics, including 18 prestigious journals, the society’s flagship member magazine, and papers and videos from more than 835 conferences. With over 400,000 journal articles, conference papers and videos to search, discover and access, our publications portfolio represents the full range of research in the field from around the globe.

About Optical Materials Express

Optical Materials Express is an open-access journal focusing on the synthesis, processing and characterization of materials for applications in optics and photonics. It is published by Optica Publishing Group and emphasizes advances in novel optical materials, their properties, modeling, synthesis and fabrication techniques; how such materials contribute to novel optical behavior; and how they enable new or improved optical devices. The Editor-in-Chief is Andrea Alù from City University of New York, USA. For more information, visit Optical Materials Express.

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