| Literature DB >> 25988910 |
Kyoungjun Choi1, Sooji Nam2,3, Youngbin Lee4, Mijin Lee, Jaeyoung Jang2,5, Sang Jin Kim1, Yong Jin Jeong2, Hyeongkeun Kim, Sukang Bae6, Ji-Beom Yoo4, Sung M Cho4, Jae-Boong Choi4, Ho Kyoon Chung4, Jong-Hyun Ahn7, Chan Eon Park2, Byung Hee Hong1.
Abstract
Preventing reactive gas species such as oxygen or water is important to ensure the stability and durability of organic electronics. Although inorganic materials have been predominantly employed as the protective layers, their poor mechanical property has hindered the practical application to flexible electronics. The densely packed hexagonal lattice of carbon atoms in graphene does not allow the transmission of small gas molecules. In addition, its outstanding mechanical flexibility and optical transmittance are expected to be useful to overcome the current mechanical limit of the inorganic materials. In this paper, we reported the measurement of the water vapor transmission rate (WVTR) through the 6-layer 10 × 10 cm(2) large-area graphene films synthesized by chemical vapor deposition (CVD). The WVTR was measured to be as low as 10(-4) g/m(2)·day initially, and stabilized at ∼0.48 g/m(2)·day, which corresponds to 7 times reduction in WVTR compared to bare polymer substrates. We also showed that the graphene-passivated organic field-effect transistors (OFETs) exhibited excellent environmental stability as well as a prolonged lifetime even after 500 bending cycles with strain of 2.3%. We expect that our results would be a good reference showing the graphene's potential as gas barriers for organic electronics.Entities:
Keywords: OFETs; bending cycles; graphene barrier; water vapor transmittance rate
Year: 2015 PMID: 25988910 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b01161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881