(Press-News.org) One day in 2010, Rutgers physicist Vitaly Podzorov watched a store employee showcase a kitchen gadget that vacuum-seals food in plastic. The demo stuck with him. The simple concept – an airtight seal around pieces of food – just might apply to his research: developing flexible electronics using lightweight organic semiconductors for products such as video displays or solar cells.
"Organic transistors, which switch or amplify electronic signals, hold promise for making video displays that bend like book pages or roll and unroll like posters," said Podzorov. But traditional methods of fabricating a part of the transistor known as the gate insulator often end up damaging the transistor's delicate semiconductor crystals.
Drawing inspiration from the food-storage gadget, Podzorov and his colleagues tried an experiment. They suspended a thin polymer membrane above the organic crystal and created a vacuum underneath, causing the membrane to collapse gently and evenly onto the crystal's surface. The result: a smooth, defect-free interface between the organic semiconductor and the gate insulator.
The researchers reported their success in the journal Advanced Materials. In the article, Podzorov and three colleagues describe how a single-crystal organic field effect transistor (OFET) made with this thin polymer gate insulator boosted electrical performance. The researchers further reported that they could remove and reapply membranes to the same crystal several times without degrading its surface.
Organic transistors electrically resemble silicon transistors in computer chips, but they are made of flexible carbon-based molecules that can be printed on sheets of plastic. Silicon transistors are made in rigid, brittle wafers of silicon.
The methods that scientists previously applied to organic transistor fabrication were based on silicon semiconductor processing, explained Podzorov, assistant professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy, School of Arts and Sciences. These involved high temperatures, high-energy plasmas or chemical reactions, all of which could damage the delicate organic crystal surface and hinder the transistor's performance.
"People have tendencies to go with something they've known for a long time," he said. "In this case, it doesn't work right."
Podzorov's innovation builds upon a decade of Rutgers research in this field, including his invention of the first single crystal organic transistor in 2003. While his latest innovation is still a ways from commercial reality, he sees an immediate application in the classroom.
"Our technique takes 10 minutes," he said. "It should be exciting for students to actually build these devices and immediately see them work, all within one lab session."
Podzorov was actually trying to solve another problem when he first recalled the food packaging demo. He was thinking about how to protect organic crystals from airborne impurities when his lab shipped samples to collaborating scientists in California and overseas.
"We could place our samples between plastic sheets and pull a vacuum," he said. "Then I thought, 'why don't we try doing this for our gate insulator?'"
INFORMATION:
Funding for the research was provided by the U. S. Department of Energy and the Rutgers Institute for Advanced Materials and Devices for Nanotechnology. Collaborators in Podzorov's lab were postdoctoral researchers Hee Taek Yi and Yuanzhen Chen, and undergraduate student Krzysztof Czelen. The department's machine shop made a custom-designed vacuum chamber for the project.
Eureka! Kitchen gadget inspires scientist to make more effective plastic electronics
2012-01-30
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Deacom Unveils New Logo and Website
2012-01-30
Deacom, Inc., producer of the DEACOM Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) software system for mid-to-large sized batch process manufacturing companies launched its new website today.
The new website, http://www.deacom.com, was designed to communicate Deacom's overall message of Complexity Made Simple to employees, customers, potential customers and the world at large. The new website outlines the capabilities of the DEACOM ERP software package offerings and explains the philosophies behind its development. Deacom has a unique niche in the ERP software industry and the ...
BWH researchers develop new drug release mechanism utilizing 3-D superhydrophobic materials
2012-01-30
BOSTON, MA—According to a recent study, there is a new mechanism of drug release using 3D superhydrophobic materials that utilizes air as a removable barrier to control the rate at which drug is released.
The study was electronically published on January 16, 2012 in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.
Boston University (BU) graduate student Stefan Yohe, under the mentorship of Mark Grinstaff , PhD, BU professor of biomedical engineering and chemistry, and Yolonda Colson, MD, PhD, director of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute/Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) ...
Dr. Mike Reed to Participate in Roundtable Panel of American Society of Phamacometrics
2012-01-30
Rosa & Co. LLC, a drug development advisory firm with expertise in drug-disease modeling and simulation, today announced that Mike Reed, PhD, Vice President of Client Services, will participate in a roundtable panel to discuss " The Use of Physiological, Mechanistic Models in Drug Development and Therapy: Introduction, Case Studies, Impact, and Ideas for Applications". This is a local event sponsored by the American Society of Pharmacometrics (ASoP), to be held on Thursday, February 2, 2012, in Bridgewater, New Jersey. At this roundtable, industry experts ...
Research on vitamins could lead to the design of novel drugs to combat malaria
2012-01-30
New research by scientists at the University of Southampton could lead to the design of more effective drugs to combat malaria.
The research will enable scientists to learn more about the nature of the enzymes required for vitamin biosynthesis by the malaria causing pathogen Plasmodium. Vitamins are essential nutrients required in small amounts, the lack of which leads to deficiencies. Many pathogenic microorganisms produce vitamins, and these biosynthetic pathways may provide suitable targets for development of new drugs.
Indeed antifolates targeting vitamin B9 biosynthesis ...
New Fitness Expert Website Offers Comprehensive Information on Finding and Becoming a Fitness Expert or Guru
2012-01-30
If you need a celebrity or local fitness expert to help you with your personal training and nutrition needs or you are seeking to expand your career by becoming a top fitness expert and personal trainer to the stars or your neighbors, a brand-new website, http://www.thefitnessexpert.com/, offers resources, links, tips and tools all focused on fitness experts.
For fitness enthusiasts, the Fitness Expert site provides group discount deals-of-the-day with the Fitness Coupon Club, a list of local fitness experts at FitnessProDirectory.com as well as information on becoming ...
Study offers new information for flu fight
2012-01-30
Athens, Ga. – Influenza virus can rapidly evolve from one form to another, complicating the effectiveness of vaccines and anti-viral drugs used to treat it. By first understanding the complex host cell pathways that the flu uses for replication, University of Georgia researchers are finding new strategies for therapies and vaccines, according to a study published in the January issue of the Journal of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology.
The researchers studied RNA interference to determine the host genes influenza uses for virus replication. ...
Brainiac babies
2012-01-30
EVANSTON, Ill. -- A Northwestern University study has found that the evidence for intuitive physics occurs in infants as young as two months – the earliest age at which testing can occur.
Intuitive physics includes skills that adults use all the time. For example, when a glass of milk falls off the table, a person might try to catch the cup, but they are not likely to try to catch the milk that spills out. The person doesn't have to consciously think about what to do because the brain processes the information and the person simply reacts.
The majority of an adult's ...
Making memories last
2012-01-30
KANSAS CITY, MO – Memories in our brains are maintained by connections between neurons called "synapses". But how do these synapses stay strong and keep memories alive for decades? Neuroscientists at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research have discovered a major clue from a study in fruit flies: Hardy, self-copying clusters or oligomers of a synapse protein are an essential ingredient for the formation of long-term memory.
The finding supports a surprising new theory about memory, and may have a profound impact on explaining other oligomer-linked functions and diseases ...
Harvey Lembeck Comedy Workshop The Premier Comedy Class in Los Angeles Celebrates 46 years
2012-01-30
The Harvey Lembeck Comedy Workshop is the premier comedy class in Los Angeles. Among its accomplished students you'll find over 150 Oscar, Emmy, SAG and Tony Award winners and nominees.
The Harvey Lembeck Comedy Workshop has been helping actors improve their comedy skills for more than 46 years.
The Workshop teaches an actor how to play comedy legitimately in a scene. The classes are designed for actors who wish to exercise their comedy skills for TV and film. It is the safest environment for actors to take risks and work on their craft.
The Workshop uses improvisation ...
The Specialty Hospital of Washington Introduces Breakthrough Technology for Patients with Fluid Overload
2012-01-30
The Specialty Hospital of Washington (http://www.specialtyhospitalofwashington.com) is the first Long Term Acute Care Hospital in the metropolitan area to offer Aquapheresis, a tremendous benefit for congestive heart failure (CHF) patients with fluid overload who do not respond to diuretics. Fluid overload is a distressing symptom of CHF, which is responsible for more than one million hospitalizations each year.
If not managed, fluids begin to accumulate in the extremities eventually causing congestion in the lungs, and making breathing difficult. The usual treatment ...