The first fully stretchable OLED
Stretchable electronics promise video displays that could be rolled
up and tucked into a shirt pocket or cell phones that could swell or
shrink. Electronic sheets that could be draped like cloth would be a
boon for robotic skin and embedded medical devices.
One challenge in creating stretchable electronics is to develop
an electrode that maintains its conductivity when deformed. To achieve
this property, some researchers have turned to carbon nanotubes because
they are stretchable, conductive and appear transparent in thin layers,
letting light shine through.
However, for carbon nanotubes to hold their shape, they must be
attached to some surface. Coating carbon nanotubes onto a plastic
backing has not worked well, because the nanotubes slide off or past
each other instead of stretching with the plastic. While some
researchers have gotten around this problem, they still were not able to
make a completely stretchable OLED.
To make their device entirely pliable, the UCLA researchers
devised a novel way of creating a carbon nanotube and polymer electrode
and layering it onto a stretchable, light-emitting plastic. To make the
blended electrode, the team coated carbon nanotubes onto a glass backing
and added a liquid polymer that becomes solid yet stretchable when
exposed to ultraviolet light. The polymer diffuses throughout the carbon
nanotube network and dries to a flexible plastic that completely
surrounds the network rather than just resting alongside it. Peeling the
polymer-and-carbon-nanotube mix off of the glass yields a smooth,
stretchable, transparent electrode.
“The infusion of the polymer into the carbon nanotube coatings
preserved the original network and its high conductance,” says Qibing
Pei, professor of materials science and engineering and principal
investigator of the project.
“The approach we used is very simple and can be easily scaled up
for real production,” says Zhibin Yu, previously a researcher in Pei’s
group and now a researcher at University of California, Berkeley, and
first author of the work, which was published online last month in
Advanced Materials.
To create the stretchable display, the team sandwiched two layers
of the carbon nanotube electrode around a plastic that emits light when
a current runs through it. The team used an office laminating device to
press the final, layered device together tightly, pushing out any air
bubbles and ensuring that the circuit would be complete when electricity
was applied. The resulting device can be stretched by as much as 45
percent while emitting a colored light. (NYT)
Source: Manila Bulletin
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