AVS 65th International Symposium & Exhibition
    Thin Films Division Thursday Sessions
       Session TF+AS+EL+EM+NS+PS+SS-ThA

Invited Paper TF+AS+EL+EM+NS+PS+SS-ThA1
Ultraflexible Organic Electronics for Bio-medical Applications

Thursday, October 25, 2018, 2:20 pm, Room 104B

Session: IoT Session: Thin Films for Flexible Electronics and IoT
Presenter: Tomoyuki Yokota, The University of Tokyo, Japan
Authors: T. Yokota, The University of Tokyo, Japan
T. Someya, The University of Tokyo, Japan
Correspondent: Click to Email

Recently, flexible electronics has much attracted to realize bio medical application for their flexibility and conformability [1-3]. To improve these characteristics, reducing the thickness of the device is very effective [4]. We have developed ultra-flexible and lightweight organic electronics and photonics devices with few micron substrates. We fabricated the 2-V operational organic transistor and circuits which has very thin gate dielectric layers. The gate dielectrics were composed of thin aluminium oxide layer and self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). Due to the very thin substrate and neutral position, our device shows the highly flexibility and conformability. The device doesn’t be broken after crumpling.

And also we fabricated highly efficient, ultra-flexible, air-stable, three-color, polymer light-emitting diodes (PLEDs) have been manufactured on one-micrometer-thick parylene substrates. The total thickness of the devices, including the substrate and encapsulation layer, is only three micrometers, which is one order of magnitude thinner than the epidermal layer of the human skin. The PLEDs are directly laminated on the surface of skin and are used as indicators/displays owing to their amazing conformability as their superthin characteristics. Three-color PLEDs exhibit a high external quantum efficiency (EQE) (12, 14, and 6% for red, green and blue, respectively) and large luminescence (over 10,000 candelas per square meter at 10 V). The PLEDs are integrated with organic photodetectors and are used as pulse oximeter.

References

[1] D. Khodagholy et al., Nature Commun. 4 1575 (2013).

[2] G. Schwartz et al., Nature Commun. 4, 1859 (2013).

[3] L. Xu et al., Nature Commun. 5 3329 (2014).

[4] D. H. Kim et al., Nat. Mater., 9, 511 (2011).