TY - JOUR
T1 - Flexible low-voltage paper transistors harnessing ion gel/cellulose fiber composites
AU - Wang, Xu
AU - Yu, Cunjiang
N1 - Funding Information:
C.Y. would like to acknowledge the funding supports from the NSF ECCS award (No. 1509763), Doctoral New Investigator grant from American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund (56840-DNI7), 3M nontenured faculty award, and the startup fund from University of Houston.
Publisher Copyright:
© Materials Research Society 2019.
PY - 2020/4/28
Y1 - 2020/4/28
N2 - Paper transistors are indispensable devices for paper-based electronic biosensing systems. Existing paper transistors mainly use paper as a mechanical support in a passive fashion. By taking advantage of the cellulose fibers in paper, here we report a transistor-in-paper where paper is employed as an essential part to allow for low-voltage operation, which addresses the long-standing challenge of high-voltage operation with existing paper transistors. Such a low-threshold voltage is because of the ion gel/cellulose fiber composite dielectric formed by modifying the paper with ion gels. We further developed paper-based inverters as examples of logic gates and an integrated tactile sensing mat based on a transistor array-enabled multiplexing device. The results collectively indicate that the ion gel-modified paper leads to a class of flexible, low-voltage transistors and integrated electronic devices, which hold promise in many applications.
AB - Paper transistors are indispensable devices for paper-based electronic biosensing systems. Existing paper transistors mainly use paper as a mechanical support in a passive fashion. By taking advantage of the cellulose fibers in paper, here we report a transistor-in-paper where paper is employed as an essential part to allow for low-voltage operation, which addresses the long-standing challenge of high-voltage operation with existing paper transistors. Such a low-threshold voltage is because of the ion gel/cellulose fiber composite dielectric formed by modifying the paper with ion gels. We further developed paper-based inverters as examples of logic gates and an integrated tactile sensing mat based on a transistor array-enabled multiplexing device. The results collectively indicate that the ion gel-modified paper leads to a class of flexible, low-voltage transistors and integrated electronic devices, which hold promise in many applications.
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U2 - 10.1557/jmr.2019.303
DO - 10.1557/jmr.2019.303
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85074139229
SN - 0884-2914
VL - 35
SP - 940
EP - 948
JO - Journal of Materials Research
JF - Journal of Materials Research
IS - 8
ER -