Flexible Transparent Electrodes Formed from Template-Patterned Thin-Film Silver
Peer reviewed, Journal article
Published version
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3122996Utgivelsesdato
2023Metadata
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- Institutt for kjemi [1353]
- Institutt for materialteknologi [2498]
- Publikasjoner fra CRIStin - NTNU [37221]
Originalversjon
10.1002/adma.202300058Sammendrag
Template-patterned, flexible transparent electrodes (TEs) formed from an ultrathin silver film on top of a commercial optical adhesive – Norland Optical Adhesive 63 (NOA63) – are reported. NOA63 is shown to be an effective base-layer for ultrathin silver films that advantageously prevents coalescence of vapor-deposited silver atoms into large, isolated islands (Volmer-Weber growth), and so aids the formation of ultrasmooth continuous films. 12 nm silver films on top of free-standing NOA63 combine high, haze-free visible-light transparency (T ≈ 60% at 550 nm) with low sheet-resistance (s ≈ 16 𝛀� sq−1), and exhibit excellent resilience to bending, making them attractive candidates for flexible TEs. Etching the NOA63 base-layer with an oxygen plasma before silver deposition causes the silver to laterally segregate into isolated pillars, resulting in a much higher sheet resistance (s > 8 × 106 𝛀� sq-1) than silver grown on pristine NOA63 . Hence, by selectively etching NOA63 before metal deposition, insulating regions may be defined within an otherwise conducting silver film, resulting in a differentially conductive film that can serve as a patterned TE for flexible devices. Transmittance may be increased (to 79% at 550 nm) by depositing an antireflective layer of Al2O3 on the Ag layer at the cost of reduced flexibility.