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Transparent Molecular Adhesive Enabling Mechanically Stable ITO Thin Films.

Shingyu BokHae-Jun SeokYun Ah KimJin-Hyeok ParkJihyun KimJoohoon KangHan Ki KimByungkwon Lim
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2021)
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.
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