Publication | Open Access
Paper-like electronic displays: Large-area rubber-stamped plastic sheets of electronics and microencapsulated electrophoretic inks
1.1K
Citations
28
References
2001
Year
MiniaturizationEngineeringOrganic ElectronicsLarge Area CoverageElectrophoretic InksFlexible SensorLightweight PlasticsDisplay TechnologyMechanical FlexibilityPrinted ElectronicsElectronic PackagingAdvanced Display TechnologyMaterials ScienceElectroactive MaterialElectrical EngineeringOrganic SemiconductorPaper-like Electronic DisplaysMicroelectronics3D PrintingSemiconducting PolymerFlexible ElectronicsMicrofabricationApplied PhysicsTechnology
Electronic systems using rugged lightweight plastics offer low‑cost processing, mechanical flexibility, and large‑area coverage. The study aims to demonstrate plastic electronic systems achieving characteristics not easily realized with silicon technologies. The authors build a 256‑transistor organic active‑matrix back.
Electronic systems that use rugged lightweight plastics potentially offer attractive characteristics (low-cost processing, mechanical flexibility, large area coverage, etc.) that are not easily achieved with established silicon technologies. This paper summarizes work that demonstrates many of these characteristics in a realistic system: organic active matrix backplane circuits (256 transistors) for large ( approximately 5 x 5-inch) mechanically flexible sheets of electronic paper, an emerging type of display. The success of this effort relies on new or improved processing techniques and materials for plastic electronics, including methods for (i) rubber stamping (microcontact printing) high-resolution ( approximately 1 microm) circuits with low levels of defects and good registration over large areas, (ii) achieving low leakage with thin dielectrics deposited onto surfaces with relief, (iii) constructing high-performance organic transistors with bottom contact geometries, (iv) encapsulating these transistors, (v) depositing, in a repeatable way, organic semiconductors with uniform electrical characteristics over large areas, and (vi) low-temperature ( approximately 100 degrees C) annealing to increase the on/off ratios of the transistors and to improve the uniformity of their characteristics. The sophistication and flexibility of the patterning procedures, high level of integration on plastic substrates, large area coverage, and good performance of the transistors are all important features of this work. We successfully integrate these circuits with microencapsulated electrophoretic "inks" to form sheets of electronic paper.
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