Dec 21, 2021 |
(Nanowerk News) A study, published in Nature Electronics (“Charge transport mechanisms in inkjet-printed thin-film transistors based on two-dimensional materials”), led by Imperial College London and Politecnico di Torino researchers reveals the physical mechanisms responsible for the transport of electricity in printed two-dimensional (2D) materials.
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The work identifies what properties of 2D material films need to be tweaked to make electronic devices to order, allowing rational design of a new class of high-performance printed and flexible electronics.
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Illustration of the three types of printable inks that go into making the device. (Image: ICL)
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Silicon chips are the components that power most of our electronics, from fitness trackers to smartphones. However, their rigid nature limits their use in flexible electronics. Made of single-atom-thick layers, 2D materials can be dispersed in solution and formulated into printable inks, producing ultra-thin films that are extremely flexible, semi-transparent and with novel electronic properties.
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This opens up the possibility of new types of devices, such as those that can be integrated into flexible and stretchable materials, like clothes, paper, or even tissues into the human body.
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Previously, researchers have built several flexible electronic devices from printed 2D material inks, but these have been one-off ‘proof-of-concept’ components, built to show how one particular property, such as high electron mobility, light detection, or charge storage can be realised.
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However, without knowing which parameters to control in order to design printed 2D material devices, their widespread use has been limited. Now, the international research team have studied how electronic charge is transported in several inkjet-printed films of 2D materials, showing how it is controlled by changes in temperature, magnetic field, and electric field.
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The team investigated three typical types of 2D materials: graphene (a ‘semimetal’ built from a single layer of carbon atoms), molybdenum disulphide (or MoS2, a ‘semiconductor’) and titanium carbide MXene (or Ti3C2, a metal) and mapped how the behaviour of the electrical charge transport changed under these different conditions.
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Lead researcher Dr Felice Torrisi, from the Department of Chemistry at Imperial, said: “Our results have a huge impact on the way we understand the transport through networks of two-dimensional materials, enabling not only the controlled design and engineering of future printed electronics based on 2D materials, but also new types of flexible electronic devices.
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“For example, our work paves the way to reliable wearable devices suitable for biomedical applications, such as the remote monitoring of patients, or bio-implantable devices for long-term monitoring of degenerative diseases or healing processes.”
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These future devices could one day replace invasive procedures, such as implanting brain electrodes to monitor degenerative conditions that affect the nervous system. Electrodes can only be implanted on a temporary basis, and are uncomfortable for the patient, whereas a flexible device made of biocompatible 2D materials could be integrated with the brain and provide constant monitoring.
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Other potential healthcare applications include wearable devices for monitoring healthcare – devices like fitness watches, but more integrated with the body, providing sufficiently accurate data to allow doctors to monitor patients without bringing them into hospital for tests.
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The relationships the team discovered between 2D material type and the controls on electrical charge transport will help other researchers design printed and flexible 2D material devices with the properties they desire, based on how they need the electrical charge to act.
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They could also reveal how to design entirely new types of electrical components impossible using silicon chips, such as transparent components or ones that modify and transmit light in new ways.
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Co-author Professor Renato Gonnelli, from the Politecnico di Torino, Italy, said: “The fundamental understanding of how the electrons are transported through networks of 2D materials underpins the way we manufacture printed electronic components. By identifying the mechanisms responsible for such electronic transport, we will be able to achieve the optimum design of high-performance printed electronics.”
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