| Literature DB >> 35540040 |
Corey Malinowski1, Fengjie He1, Yihong Zhao1, Ivan Chang1, David W Hatchett2, Shengjie Zhai1, Hui Zhao1.
Abstract
Simultaneous high transparency and high haze are necessary for high-efficiency optical, photonic, and optoelectronic applications. However, a typical highly transparent film lacks high optical haze or vice versa. Here, we report a silk fibroin-based optical film that exhibits both ultrahigh optical transparency (>93%) and ultrahigh optical transmission haze (>65%). Also, in combination with the soft lithography method, different nanostructured silk fibroin films are presented and their optical properties are characterized as well. To demonstrate its exceptional performance in both high transmission and high optical haze, we combine the silk fibroin with the silicon photodiode and show that the efficiency can be increased by 6.96% with the silk fibroin film without patterns and 14.9% with the nanopatterned silk fibroin film. Silk provides excellent mechanical, optical, and electrical properties, and the reported high-performance silk fibroin can enable the development of next-generation biocompatible eco-friendly flexible electronic and optical devices. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 35540040 PMCID: PMC9076258 DOI: 10.1039/c9ra07391d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1The schematics of the silk fibroin extraction procedure.
Fig. 2The deconvolution of FTIR-ATR spectra for the amide I band for (a) untreated and (b) water-annealed silk fibroin films.
Vibrational band assignments for the amide I region of silk fibroin[36–38]
| Wavenumber range (cm−1) | Secondary structure assignment |
|---|---|
| 1605–1615 | Side chains |
| 1616–1627 | β-sheet |
| 1628–1637 | β-sheet |
| 1638–1646 | Random coils |
| 1647–1655 | Random coils |
| 1656–1662 | α-helix |
| 1663–1672 | Turns |
| 1673–1685 | Turns |
| 1686–1695 | Turns |
| 1697–1703 | β-sheet (weak) |
The relative ratio of secondary structures in the regenerated silk fibroin film
| Silk secondary structure | Untreated (% content) | Water-annealed (% content) |
|---|---|---|
| Side chains | 9.6 | 18.6 |
| β-sheet | 29.1 | 49.8 |
| Random coils | 33.6 | 17.9 |
| α-helix | 18.5 | 5.8 |
| Turns | 9.2 | 7.9 |
Fig. 3The schematics of the fabrication procedure to pattern nanostructures onto the silk fibroin film.
Fig. 4The light scattering of the master, PDMS mold, and the patterned silk fibroin film with the laser light test.
Fig. 5The transmittance (a) and the optical transmission haze (b) as a function of the wavelength for various films.
Fig. 6The SEM images of random arrangement of silk nanofibrils in the silk fibroin film.
Fig. 7(a) The schematics of the photodiode coated with the silk fibroin film; (b) The I–V curves of silicon photodiodes without (the black solid line) and with the encapsulated silk fibroin films; (c) the angular dependence of a normalized photocurrent without (the black solid line) and with encapsulated silk fibroin films, showing omnidirectional optical properties.