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Flexible, Flippable Plastic Semiconductor Created

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MADISON, Wisc., July 19, 2006 -- A newly invented thin-film semiconductor fabrication process can be used to add sensing, computing and imaging capabilities to a wide array of materials, including plastic and glass, its creators said, opening a wide range of possibilities for flexible electronics

Historically, the semiconductor industry has relied on flat, two-dimensional chips upon which to grow and etch the thin films of material that become electronic circuits for computers and other electronic devices. But as thin as those chips might seem, they are quite beefy in comparison to the result of a new University of Wisconsin-Madison semiconductor fabrication process detailed in the current issue of the Journal of Applied Physics.UMadisonChip.jpg
University of Wisconsin electrical and computer engineering graduate student Hao-Chih Yuan holds a sample of a semiconductor film on plastic.


A team led by electrical and computer engineer Zhenqiang Ma and materials scientist Max Lagally have developed a process to remove a single-crystal film of semiconductor from the substrate on which it is built. This thin layer (only a couple of hundred nanometers thick) can be transferred to glass, plastic or other flexible materials, creating flexible electronics.

In addition, the researchers said, the semiconductor film can be flipped as it is transferred to its new substrate, making its other side available for more components. This doubles the possible number of devices that can be placed on the film. By repeating the process, layers of double-sided, thin-film semiconductors can be stacked together, creating powerful, low-power, three-dimensional electronic devices.

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"It's important to note that these are single-crystal films of strained silicon or silicon germanium," said Ma. "Strain is introduced in the way we form the membrane. Introducing strain changes the arrangement of atoms in the crystal such that we can achieve much faster device speed while consuming less power."

For non-computer applications, flexible electronics are beginning to have significant impact. Solar cells, smart cards, radio frequency identification (RFID) tags, medical applications and active-matrix flat panel displays could all benefit from the development. The techniques could also allow flexible semiconductors to be embedded in fabric to create wearable electronics or computer monitors that roll up like a window shade.

"This is potentially a paradigm shift," said Lagally. "The ability to create fast, low-power, multilayer electronics has many exciting applications. Silicon germanium membranes are particularly interesting. Germanium has a much higher adsorption for light than silicon. By including the germanium without destroying the quality of the material, we can achieve devices with two to three orders of magnitude more sensitivity."

That increased sensitivity could be applied to create superior low-light cameras, or smaller cameras with greater resolution, he said.

Ma, Lagally, materials science and engineering assistant professor Paul Evans, physics associate professor Mark Eriksson and graduate students Hao-Chih Yuan and Guogong Wang are patenting the new techniques through the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation. The team's work was supported in part by grants from the National Science Foundation Materials Research Science and Engineering Center, the Department of Energy and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research. For more information, visit: www.wisc.edu

Published: July 2006
Glossary
electronics
That branch of science involved in the study and utilization of the motion, emissions and behaviors of currents of electrical energy flowing through gases, vacuums, semiconductors and conductors, not to be confused with electrics, which deals primarily with the conduction of large currents of electricity through metals.
chipsConsumerelectronicsenergyetchfabricationflexibleLagallyMaNews & Featuresplasticsemiconductorssilicon germaniumstrained siliconthin-filmtwo-dimensionalWisconsin

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