Paint-on Plastic Electronics: Aligning Polymers for High Performance

Semi-conducting polymers are an unruly bunch, but a new method for getting them in line could pave the way for cheaper, greener, “paint-on” plastic electronics.

Written byUniversity of Michigan
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Semi-conducting polymers are an unruly bunch, but a new method for getting them in line could pave the way for cheaper, greener, “paint-on” plastic electronics. Jinsang Kim's group has developed and demonstrated a technique for creating high-performance semiconducting plastic surfaces.

“This is for the first time a thin-layer, conducting, highly-aligned film for high-performance, paintable, directly writeable plastic electronics,” said Kim, an associate professor of materials science and engineering at the University of Michigan, who led the research. The work is in Nature Materials.

Semiconductors are the key ingredient for computer processors, solar cells, and LED displays, but they are expensive. Inorganic semiconductors like silicon require high temperatures in excess of 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit and costly vacuum systems for processing into electronics, but organic and plastic semiconductors can be prepared on a basic lab bench. The trouble is that charge carriers, like electrons, can’t move through plastics nearly as easily as they can move through inorganic semiconductors.

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