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Journal ArticleDOI

An electrophoretic ink for all-printed reflective electronic displays

TLDR
In this article, an electrophoretic ink based on the microencapsulation of an electrophic dispersion was used to solve the lifetime issues and allow the fabrication of a bistable electronic display solely by means of printing.
Abstract
It has for many years been an ambition of researchers in display media to create a flexible low-cost system that is the electronic analogue of paper. In this context, microparticle-based displays1,2,3,4,5 have long intrigued researchers. Switchable contrast in such displays is achieved by the electromigration of highly scattering or absorbing microparticles (in the size range 0.1–5 μm), quite distinct from the molecular-scale properties that govern the behaviour of the more familiar liquid-crystal displays6. Microparticle-based displays possess intrinsic bistability, exhibit extremely low power d.c. field addressing and have demonstrated high contrast and reflectivity. These features, combined with a near-lambertian viewing characteristic, result in an ‘ink on paper’ look7. But such displays have to date suffered from short lifetimes and difficulty in manufacture. Here we report the synthesis of an electrophoretic ink based on the microencapsulation of an electrophoretic dispersion8. The use of a microencapsulated electrophoretic medium solves the lifetime issues and permits the fabrication of a bistable electronic display solely by means of printing. This system may satisfy the practical requirements of electronic paper.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Organic Thin Film Transistors for Large Area Electronics

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present new insight into conduction mechanisms and performance characteristics, as well as opportunities for modeling properties of organic thin-film transistors (OTFTs) and discuss progress in the growing field of n-type OTFTs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Semiconducting π-conjugated systems in field-effect transistors: a material odyssey of organic electronics.

TL;DR: The focus of this review will be on the performance analysis of π-conjugated systems in OFETs, a kind of device consisting of an organic semiconducting layer, a gate insulator layer, and three terminals that provide an important insight into the charge transport of ρconjugate systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flexible active-matrix displays and shift registers based on solution-processed organic transistors.

TL;DR: Flexible active-matrix monochrome electrophoretic displays based on solution-processed organic transistors on 25-μm-thick polyimide substrates based on 1,888 transistors are demonstrated, which are the largest organic integrated circuits reported to date.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organic thin-film transistors: a review of recent advances

TL;DR: This paper review in more detail related work that originated at IBM during the last four years and has led to the fabrication of high-performance organic transistors on flexible, transparent plastic substrates requiring low operating voltages.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Photonic-bandgap microcavities in optical waveguides

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured microcavity resonances in two-and three-dimensional photonic-bandgap (PBG) structures integrated directly into a sub-micrometre-scale silicon waveguide.
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Ink-jet printing of doped polymers for organic light emitting devices

TL;DR: Ink-jet printing was used to directly deposit patterned luminescent doped polyvinyl carbazol (PVK) films as mentioned in this paper, and light emitting diodes with low turn-on voltages were also fabricated in PVK doped with coumarin 6 (C6).
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Photonic band gaps in three dimensions: New layer-by-layer periodic structures

TL;DR: In this article, a 3D periodic dielectric structure with circular, elliptical, or rectangular shape is introduced. But the 3D layer structure can be easily fabricated using conventional microfabrication techniques on the scale of optical wavelengths.
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Two-dimensional photonic-bandgap structures operating at near-infrared wavelengths

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that by restricting the geometry of the photonic crystal to two dimensions (in a waveguide configuration), structures with polarization-sensitive photonic band-gaps at still lower wavelengths (in the range 800-900 nm) can be readily fabricated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Localization of Light

Sajeev John
- 01 May 1991 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that any alteration of electromagnetism, the fundamental interaction overning atomic, molecular and condensed matter physics, will lead to fundamentally new phenomena in all these areas.