| Literature DB >> 25068486 |
Zhi-Qiang Fang1, Hong-Li Zhu2, Yuan-Yuan Li3, Zhen Liu3, Jia-Qi Dai3, Colin Preston3, Sean Garner4, Pat Cimo4, Xin-Sheng Chai5, Gang Chen5, Liang-Bing Hu3.
Abstract
Ultra-thin flexible glass with high transparency is attractive for a broad range of display applications; however, substrates with low optical haze are not ideal for thin film solar cells, since most of the light will go through the semiconductor layer without scattering, and the length of light travelling path in the active layer is small. By simply depositing a layer of TEMPO (2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl radical)-oxidized wood fibers (TOWFs), we are able to tailor the optical properties of flexible glass dramatically from exhibiting low haze (<1%) to high haze (~56%) without compromising the total forward transmittance (~90%). The influence of the TOWFs morphology on the optical properties of TOWFs-coated flexible glass is investigated. As the average fiber length decreases, the transmission haze of TOWF-coated flexible glass illustrates a decreasing trend. Earth-abundant natural materials for transparent, hazy, and flexible glass have tremendous applicability in the fabrication of flexible optoelectronics with tunable light scattering effects by enabling inexpensive and large-scale processes.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25068486 PMCID: PMC5376167 DOI: 10.1038/srep05842
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic showing (a) the incident light passes through flexible glass and (b) TOWF-coated flexible glass; (c) digital images of flexible glass (left, thickness = 100 μm) and long TOWFs-coated flexible glass (right, thickness = 127 μm); (d) top-view SEM image of TOWFs layer.
Dimension of original wood fibers and long TOWFs
| Average width/μm | Average length/mm | Fine content/% | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Original wood fibers | 27 | 1.98 | 7 |
| Long TOWFs | 26 | 0.72 | 19.0 |
Figure 2(a) Microscopic image and (b) SEM image of long TOWFs; inset indicates a red laser passes through TOWF suspension (0.5 wt %) from the left side; (c) length fraction and (d) width fraction of long TOWFs; (e) length fraction and (f) width fraction of original wood fibers.
Figure 3(a) Optical transmittance and (b) transmission haze of long TOWFs-coated flexible glass; digital image showing the transmission haze of (c) flexible glass and (d) long TOWFs-coated flexible glass (left: both closely contact underneath color letters, right; both at a distance of 1.5 cm from underneath color letters.
Figure 4(a) Length fraction and (b) width fraction of short TOWFs. (b) Microscopic image and (c) SEM image of TEMPO-oxidized short wood fibers (TOWFs); inset shows a red laser passes through short TOWFs suspension (0.5 wt %) from the left side with regard to the viewing perspective. (d) Optical transmittance and (e) transmission haze of short wood fibers-coated flexible glass. (Inset in figure 4c: short wood fibers suspension, inset in figure 4e shows wood fiber-coated flexible glass.
Dimension of long TOWFs and short TOWFs
| Average width/μm | Average length/mm | Fine content/% | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Long TOWFs | 26 | 0.72 | 19.0 |
| Short TOWFs | 25 | 0.23 | 45.5 |
Figure 5(a) Digital photo of fractured long TOWFs-coated flexible glass, (b) an SEM image of fractures; (c) long TOWFs-coated flexible glass showing a decrease of crack propagation, and (d) adhesion testing between long TOWFs layer and flexible glass.
Figure 6(a) Schematic of solar cells with a top layer of TOWF-coated flexible glass to enhance light trapping performance; (b) flexible glass (left) and short TOWF-coated flexible glass (right) covered on mobile phone screen shows anti-glare performance.