9,262 research outputs found
Printed dose-recording tag based on organic complementary circuits and ferroelectric nonvolatile memories.
We have demonstrated a printed electronic tag that monitors time-integrated sensor signals and writes to nonvolatile memories for later readout. The tag is additively fabricated on flexible plastic foil and comprises a thermistor divider, complementary organic circuits, and two nonvolatile memory cells. With a supply voltage below 30 V, the threshold temperatures can be tuned between 0 °C and 80 °C. The time-temperature dose measurement is calibrated for minute-scale integration. The two memory bits are sequentially written in a thermometer code to provide an accumulated dose record
Investigations on electromagnetic noises and interactions in electronic architectures : a tutorial case on a mobile system
Electromagnetic interactions become critic in embedded and smart electronic structures. The increase of electronic performances confined in a finite volume or support for mobile applications defines new electromagnetic environment and compatibility configurations (EMC). With canonical demonstrators developed for tutorials and EMC experiences, this paper present basic principles and experimental techniques to investigate and control these severe interferences. Some issues are reviewed to present actual and future scientific challenges for EMC at electronic circuit level
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Manufacturing flexible light-emitting polymer displays with conductive lithographic film technology
We report on a new low-cost manufacturing process for flexible displays that has the potential to rapidly expand the market into areas that have traditionally been outside the scope of such technology. In this paper we consider the feasibility of using offset-lithography to deposit contacts for polymer light-emitting displays. We compare and contrast manufacturing criteria and present a case study detailing our initial results. It is expected that these developments will stimulate further progress in multilayer device
fabrication.
Cheap, flexible conductive interconnects have the potential to find applications in a wide variety of device structures. For the more challenging exploitation areas in multilayer devices, such as displays, it was found that the properties of conductive lithographic films were not optimal in their current form. Three parameters (conductivity, surface roughness and surface work function) were identified as critical to device fabrication. Calendering and electroless plating were investigated as methods to improve these properties. Both methods aimed to modify the surface roughness and conductivity, with the plating study also modifying the work function
Tattoo-Paper Transfer as a Versatile Platform for All-Printed Organic Edible Electronics
The use of natural or bioinspired materials to develop edible electronic
devices is a potentially disruptive technology that can boost point-of-care
testing. The technology exploits devices which can be safely ingested, along
with pills or even food, and operated from within the gastrointestinal tract.
Ingestible electronics could potentially target a significant number of
biomedical applications, both as therapeutic and diagnostic tool, and this
technology may also impact the food industry, by providing ingestible or
food-compatible electronic tags that can smart track goods and monitor their
quality along the distribution chain. We hereby propose temporary tattoo-paper
as a simple and versatile platform for the integration of electronics onto food
and pharmaceutical capsules. In particular, we demonstrate the fabrication of
all-printed Organic Field-Effect Transistors (OFETs) on untreated commercial
tattoo-paper, and their subsequent transfer and operation on edible substrates
with a complex non-planar geometry
Device Modelling of Silicon Based High-Performance Flexible Electronics
The area of flexible electronics is rapidly expanding and evolving. With applications requiring high speed and performance, ultra-thin silicon-based electronics has shown its prominence. However, the change in device response upon bending is a major concern. In absence of suitable analytical and design tool friendly model, the behavior under bent condition is hard to predict. This poses challenges to circuit designer working in the bendable electronics field, in laying out a design that can give a precise response in a stressed condition. This paper presents advances in this direction and investigates the effect of compressive and tensile stress on the performance of NMOS and PMOS transistor and a touch sensor comprising a transistor and piezoelectric capacitor
Design Drives - materials innovation
Design Drives Materials Innovation‘ outlines the potential of a D:STEM (Design, Science, Technology, Engineering amd Mathematics) approach to combining traditionally different fields through design-led, needs driven and technology anchored future products using electro/photo/bio-active polymers in physical formats defined in ‚dots, lines, surfaces and structures‘.It also identifies Ambient Assisted Living as a key driver for future applications
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