Publication | Closed Access
Highly Flexible Organic Nanofiber Phototransistors Fabricated on a Textile Composite for Wearable Photosensors
117
Citations
57
References
2016
Year
Wearable PhotosensorsSmart TextileEngineeringResponsive PolymersBiomedical EngineeringPolymer NanocompositesFlexible SensorBiomedical DevicesNanofiber PhototransistorsPhotopolymer NetworkPolymer ChemistryEthylene OxideMaterials ScienceWearable ElectronicsNanofiberBiomedical SensorsElectronic MaterialsFlexible ElectronicsNanomaterialsFlexible SensorsSemiconducting PolymerPolymer ScienceOrganic NanofibersTextile Composite
Highly flexible organic nanofiber phototransistors are fabricated on a highly flexible poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) textile/poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) composite substrate. Organic nanofibers are obtained by electrospinning, using a mixture of poly(3,3 ″′ ‐didodecylquarterthiophene) (PQT‐12) and poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) as the semiconducting polymer and processing aid, respectively. PDMS is used as both a buffer layer for flattening the PET textile and a dielectric layer in the bottom‐gate bottom‐contact device configuration. PQT‐12:PEO nanofibers can be well‐aligned on the textile composite substrate by electrospinning onto a rotating drum collector. The nanofiber phototransistors fabricated on the PET/PDMS textile composite substrate show highly stable device performance (on‐current retention up to 82.3 (±6.7)%) under extreme bending conditions, with a bending radius down to 0.75 mm and repeated tests over 1000 cycles, while those prepared on film‐type PET and PDMS‐only substrates exhibit much poorer performances. The photoresponsive behaviors of PQT‐12:PEO nanofiber phototransistors have been investigated under light irradiation with different wavelengths. The maximum photoresponsivity, photocurrent/dark‐current ratio, and external quantum efficiency under blue light illumination were 930 mA W −1 , 2.76, and 246%, respectively. Furthermore, highly flexible 10 × 10 photosensor arrays have been fabricated which are able to detect incident photonic signals with high resolution. The flexible photosensors described herein have high potential for applications as wearable photosensors.
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