| Literature DB >> 33634556 |
Jung Ho Shin1, Jung Hwan Park2, Jeongmin Seo3, Tae Hong Im1, Jong Chan Kim4, Han Eol Lee1, Do Hyun Kim1, Kie Young Woo5, Hu Young Jeong4, Yong-Hoon Cho5, Taek-Soo Kim3, Il-Suk Kang6, Keon Jae Lee1.
Abstract
A robust Cu conductor on a glass substrate for thin-film μLEDs using the flash-induced chemical/physical interlocking between Cu and glass is reported. During millisecond light irradiation, CuO nanoparticles (NPs) on the display substrate are transformed into a conductive Cu film by reduction and sintering. At the same time, intensive heating at the boundary of CuO NPs and glass chemically induces the formation of an ultrathin Cu2 O interlayer within the Cu/glass interface for strong adhesion. Cu nanointerlocking occurs by transient glass softening and interface fluctuation to increase the contact area. Owing to these flash-induced interfacial interactions, the flash-activated Cu electrode exhibits an adhesion energy of 10 J m-2 , which is five times higher than that of vacuum-deposited Cu. An AlGaInP thin-film vertical μLED (VLED) forms an electrical interconnection with the flash-induced Cu electrode via an ACF bonding process, resulting in a high optical power density of 41 mW mm-2 . The Cu conductor enables reliable VLED operation regardless of harsh thermal stress and moisture infiltration under a high-temperature storage test, temperature humidity test, and thermal shock test. 50 × 50 VLED arrays transferred onto the flash-induced robust Cu electrode show high illumination yield and uniform distribution of forward voltage, peak wavelength, and device temperature.Entities:
Keywords: Cu electrodes; glass; interface chemistry; physical interlocking; thin-film μLEDs
Year: 2021 PMID: 33634556 DOI: 10.1002/adma.202007186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849