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Transparent Molecular Adhesive Enabling Mechanically Stable ITO Thin Films.

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With rapid advances in flexible electronics, transparent conductive electrodes (TCEs) have also been significantly developed as alternatives to the conventional indium tin oxide (ITO)-based material systems that exhibit low mechanical… Click to show full abstract

With rapid advances in flexible electronics, transparent conductive electrodes (TCEs) have also been significantly developed as alternatives to the conventional indium tin oxide (ITO)-based material systems that exhibit low mechanical flexibility. Nanomaterial-based alternating materials, such as graphene, nanowire, and nanomesh, exhibit remarkable properties for TCE-based applications, such as high electrical conductivity, high optical transparency, and high mechanical stability. However, these nanomaterial-based systems lack scalability, which is a key requirement for practical applications, and exhibit a size-dependent property variation and inhomogeneous surface uniformity that limit reliable properties over a large area. Here, we exploited a conventional ITO-based material platform; however, we incorporated a transparent molecular adhesive, 4-aminopyridine (4-AP), to improve mechanical flexibility. While the presence of 4-AP barely affected optical transmittance and sheet resistance, it improved interfacial adhesion between the substrate and ITO as well as formed a wavy surface, which could improve the mechanical flexibility. Under various mechanical tests, ITO/4-AP/poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) exhibited remarkably improved mechanical flexibility as compared with that of ITO/PET. Furthermore, ITO/4-AP/PET was utilized for a flexible Joule heater application having spatial uniformity of heat generation, voltage-dependent temperature control, and mechanical flexibility under repeated bending tests. This molecular adhesive could overcome the current limitations of material systems for flexible electronics.

Keywords: mechanical flexibility; molecular adhesive; transparent molecular; ito

Journal Title: ACS applied materials & interfaces
Year Published: 2021

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