A detachable interface for stable low-voltage stretchable transistor arrays and high-resolution X-ray imaging

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Abstract

Challenges associated with stretchable optoelectronic devices, such as pixel size, power consumption and stability, severely brock their realization in high-resolution digital imaging. Herein, we develop a universal detachable interface technique that allows uniform, damage-free and reproducible integration of micropatterned stretchable electrodes for pixel-dense intrinsically stretchable organic transistor arrays. Benefiting from the ideal heterocontact and short channel length (2 μm) in our transistors, switching current ratio exceeding 106, device density of 41,000 transistors/cm2, operational voltage down to 5 V and excellent stability are simultaneously achieved. The resultant stretchable transistor-based image sensors exhibit ultrasensitive X-ray detection and high-resolution imaging capability. A megapixel image is demonstrated, which is unprecedented for stretchable direct-conversion X-ray detectors. These results forge a bright future for the stretchable photonic integration toward next-generation visualization equipment.

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Bian, Y., Zhu, M., Wang, C., Liu, K., Shi, W., Zhu, Z., … Guo, Y. (2024). A detachable interface for stable low-voltage stretchable transistor arrays and high-resolution X-ray imaging. Nature Communications, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-47026-9

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