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Alfred Wanga

Bio: Alfred Wanga is an academic researcher from Pennsylvania State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: OLED & Flexible display. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications receiving 561 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a pentacene organic thin-film transistor (OTFT) driven active matrix organic light-emitting diode (OLED) displays on flexible polyethylene terephthalete substrates were fabricated.
Abstract: We have fabricated pentacene organic thin-film transistor (OTFT) driven active matrix organic light-emitting diode (OLED) displays on flexible polyethylene terephthalete substrates These displays have 48×48 bottom-emission OLED pixels with two pentacene OTFTs used per pixel Parylene is used to isolate the OTFTs and OLEDs with good OTFT yield and uniformity

577 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
05 May 2006
TL;DR: In this article, a pentacene organic thin-film transistor (OTFT) driven active matrix organic light-emitting diode (OLED) display was fabricated on both glass and flexible polyethylene terephthalete (PET) substrates.
Abstract: We have fabricated pentacene organic thin-film transistor (OTFT) driven active matrix organic light-emitting diode (OLED) displays on both glass and flexible polyethylene terephthalete (PET) substrates. These displays have 48 × 48 bottom-emission OLED pixels with two pentacene OTFTs used per pixel. Polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) and parylene were used to photolithographically pattern the pentacene active layer and isolate the OTFT backplane from the OLEDs. Pentacene OTFTs are able to easily supply the current required for OLED operation, but improvements in device uniformity and stability are of interest.

4 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: New approaches to add functionality were developed to improve the processability of these materials in solution, allowing the synthesis of acenes larger than pentacene, which have hitherto been largely unavailable and poorly studied.
Abstract: Acenes have long been the subject of intense study because of the unique electronic properties associated with their pi-bond topology. Recent reports of impressive semiconductor properties of larger homologues have reinvigorated research in this field, leading to new methods for their synthesis, functionalization, and purification, as well as for fabricating organic electronic components. Studies performed on high-purity acene single crystals revealed their intrinsic electronic properties and provide useful benchmarks for thin film device research. New approaches to add functionality were developed to improve the processability of these materials in solution. These new functionalization strategies have recently allowed the synthesis of acenes larger than pentacene, which have hitherto been largely unavailable and poorly studied, as well as investigation of their associated structure/property relationships.

1,741 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The manufacture of printable elastic conductors comprising single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) uniformly dispersed in a fluorinated rubber is described, which is constructed a rubber-like stretchable active-matrix display comprising integrated printed elastic conductor, organic transistors and organic light-emitting diodes.
Abstract: Stretchability will significantly expand the applications scope of electronics, particularly for large-area electronic displays, sensors and actuators. Unlike for conventional devices, stretchable electronics can cover arbitrary surfaces and movable parts. However, a large hurdle is the manufacture of large-area highly stretchable electrical wirings with high conductivity. Here, we describe the manufacture of printable elastic conductors comprising single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) uniformly dispersed in a fluorinated rubber. Using an ionic liquid and jet-milling, we produce long and fine SWNT bundles that can form well-developed conducting networks in the rubber. Conductivity of more than 100 S cm(-1) and stretchability of more than 100% are obtained. Making full use of this extraordinary conductivity, we constructed a rubber-like stretchable active-matrix display comprising integrated printed elastic conductors, organic transistors and organic light-emitting diodes. The display could be stretched by 30-50% and spread over a hemisphere without any mechanical or electrical damage.

1,616 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Feb 2007-Nature
TL;DR: This work demonstrates an organic circuit with very low power consumption that uses a self-assembled monolayer gate dielectric and two different air-stable molecular semiconductors (pentacene and hexadecafluorocopperphthalocyanine, F16CuPc) to implement transistors, circuits, displays and sensors on arbitrary substrates.
Abstract: Organic transistors and circuits show great promise for the realization of futuristic roll-up displays, adaptive sensors for humanoid robots and ubiquitous radio-frequency identification tags. But today's organic circuits require operating voltages of 15 to 30 volts (10 to 20 batteries' worth), and they draw enough power to drain those batteries in a day. To overcome this major hurdle, Hagen Klauk et al. have developed a method of fabricating organic circuits that run on a single 1.5-volt battery for several years. The key to the method is the use of a layer of an insulating organic material just one molecule thick; although the layer is very thin, it leaks only a small amount of current, while it provides for a large capacitance. Two different types of organic semiconductors are used to fabricate transistors, logic gates and ring oscillators. A report of the development of organic electronic circuits, which require only a single 1.5V battery and last for several years. The main ingredient is the use of a single layer of an insulating organic material. Although the layer is very thin, it leaks only small amount of current, while providing for a large capacitance. The prospect of using low-temperature processable organic semiconductors to implement transistors, circuits, displays and sensors on arbitrary substrates, such as glass or plastics, offers enormous potential for a wide range of electronic products1. Of particular interest are portable devices that can be powered by small batteries or by near-field radio-frequency coupling. The main problem with existing approaches is the large power consumption of conventional organic circuits, which makes battery-powered applications problematic, if not impossible. Here we demonstrate an organic circuit with very low power consumption that uses a self-assembled monolayer gate dielectric and two different air-stable molecular semiconductors (pentacene and hexadecafluorocopperphthalocyanine, F16CuPc). The monolayer dielectric is grown on patterned metal gates at room temperature and is optimized to provide a large gate capacitance and low gate leakage currents. By combining low-voltage p-channel and n-channel organic thin-film transistors in a complementary circuit design, the static currents are reduced to below 100 pA per logic gate. We have fabricated complementary inverters, NAND gates, and ring oscillators that operate with supply voltages between 1.5 and 3 V and have a static power consumption of less than 1 nW per logic gate. These organic circuits are thus well suited for battery-powered systems such as portable display devices2 and large-surface sensor networks3 as well as for radio-frequency identification tags with extended operating range4.

1,324 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
26 Mar 2012-ACS Nano
TL;DR: In this paper, a graphene-based ink by liquid phase exfoliation of graphite in N-methylpyrrolidone was used to print thin-film transistors, with mobilities up to ∼95 cm2 V 1 s−1, as well as transparent and conductive patterns, with ∼80% transmittance and ∼30 kΩ/□ sheet resistance.
Abstract: We demonstrate inkjet printing as a viable method for large-area fabrication of graphene devices. We produce a graphene-based ink by liquid phase exfoliation of graphite in N-methylpyrrolidone. We use it to print thin-film transistors, with mobilities up to ∼95 cm2 V–1 s–1, as well as transparent and conductive patterns, with ∼80% transmittance and ∼30 kΩ/□ sheet resistance. This paves the way to all-printed, flexible, and transparent graphene devices on arbitrary substrates.

967 citations