Flexible-electronics is rapidly finding many main-stream applications where low-cost, ruggedness, light weight, unconventional form factors and ease of manufacturability are just some of the important advantages over their conventional rigid-substrate counterparts. Flexible Electronics: Materials and Applications surveys the materials systems and processes that are used to fabricate devices that can be employed in a wide variety of applications, including flexible flat-panel displays, medical image sensors, photovoltaics, and electronic paper. Materials discussed range from polymeric semiconductors to nanotube transparent conductors, highlighting the important characteristics of each system and their target applications. An overview of the performance benchmarks for the different materials is given in order to allow a direct comparison of these different technologies. Furthermore, the devices and processes most suitable for given applications in flexible electronics are identified.
Topics covered include:
- An overview and history of flexible electronics
- Novel materials for solution-processable thin-film electronic devices and their properties
- Low-temperature processing of conventional materials and devices on plastic foils
- Novel techniques, such as printing and roll-to-roll processing, for large-area flexible electronics manufacturing
- Materials and device physics relevant to flexible electronics
- Device integration on flexible substrates
- Mechanical and electronic characteristics for thin-film transistors and nano-scale transparent conductors on flexible platforms
- Applications towards flexible displays, sensors, actuators, solar energy, radio-frequency identification, and micro-electro-mechanical systems
Written by leading researchers in the field, Flexible Electronics: Materials and Applications serves as a reference for researchers, engineers, and students interested in the characteristics, capabilities, and limitations of these exciting materials and emerging applications.