Graphene-based nanolaminates as ultra-high permeation barriers

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Abstract

Permeation barrier films are critical to a wide range of applications. In particular, for organic electronics and photovoltaics not only ultra-low permeation values are required but also optical transparency. A laminate structure thereby allows synergistic effects between different materials. Here, we report on a combination of chemical vapor deposition (CVD) and atomic layer deposition (ALD) to create in scalable fashion few-layer graphene/aluminium oxide-based nanolaminates. The resulting ~10 nm contiguous, flexible graphene-based films are >90% optically transparent and show water vapor transmission rates below 7 × 10−3 g/m2/day measured over areas of 5 × 5 cm2. We deploy these films to provide effective encapsulation for organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) with measured half-life times of 880 h in ambient.

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Sagade, A. A., Aria, A. I., Edge, S., Melgari, P., Gieseking, B., Bayer, B. C., … Hofmann, S. (2017). Graphene-based nanolaminates as ultra-high permeation barriers. Npj 2D Materials and Applications, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41699-017-0037-z

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