NOVEL CONDUCTORS FOR FLEXIBLE, ROBUST ELECTRONIC DEVICES

Karen Gleason
Department of Chemical Engineering
The standard transparent conducting electrode material for displays
and other electronics, indium tin oxide (ITO), is brittle and cracks
easily upon impact or bending. Widely used as the top layer in
devices where transparency to visible light is important, ITO is
also incorporated in many emerging organic electronic devices,
such as light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) and plastic solar cells.
Adding flexibility to ITO would enable bending capabilities for
conventional and next-generation displays, photovoltaics, and solid-state
lighting panels and extend the applications of touch screens by
improving robustness.
Currently, ITO-based conducting electrodes are a $1 billion market,
and demand for ITO has been outstripping supplies. The introduction
of a transparent conducting material using smaller amounts of
ITO would not only increase flexibility and robustness, but
reduce
cost and improve availability of a vital component for the electronics
industry.
This project is developing a composite material consisting of
ITO and a conductive polymer. A recently invented polymer processing
technique opens the possibility of co-depositing ITO and electronic
polymers — a single-step process that would result in a thin,
homogeneous ITO/polymer composite film combining the high conductivity
of ITO and the flexibility of the polymer.
|