The laser pulse lasted just a few tens of nanoseconds, he said, and left the paper completely intact. Testing the conductive performance, researchers found that thin-film transistors using the laser-printed layer exhibited mobilities as high as those of conventional polysilicon conductors.
The new method also transforms the liquid silicon into polysilicon, bypassing the need for the conventional 350 °C thermal annealing step that has proved too hot for many flexible surfaces.
Numerous applications could be possible thanks to the researchers' findings.
"The process can be expanded to biomedical sensor and solar-cell areas," Ishihara said. "And [it] will also realize stretchable — and even edible — electronics."
Other applications include wearable electronics, as the new technique allows for production of fast, low-power, flexible transistors at low cost. Ishihara said he believes the future of the project, which also involves "improving the production process of the thin-film transistors to include additional non-silicon layers," could expand even further into other electronics.
The research was published in Applied Physics Letters (doi: 10.1063/1.4916998).
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