Metallic seals can be resistant to air leakage, resistant to degradation under heat, and capable of carrying mechanical loads. Various technologies-such as organic solar cells and organic light emitting diodes-need, at least benefit from, such metallic seals. However, these technologies involve polymeric materials and can tolerate neither the high-temperature nor the high-pressure processes of conventional metallic sealing. Recent progress in nanorod growth opens the door to metallic sealing for these technologies. Here, we report a process of metallic sealing using small well-separated Ag nanorods; the process is at room temperature, under a small mechanical pressure of 9.0âMPa, and also in ambient. The metallic seals have an air leak rate of 1.1 × 10-3 âcm 3 atm/m 2/day, and a mechanical shear strength higher than 8.9âMPa. This leak rate meets the requirements of organic solar cells and organic light emitting diodes.
CITATION STYLE
Stagon, S. P., & Huang, H. (2013). Airtight metallic sealing at room temperature under small mechanical pressure. Scientific Reports, 3. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep03066
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