Biomimetic wafer-scale alignment of tellurium nanowires for high-mobility flexible and stretchable electronics

Author:

Zhao Yingtao1ORCID,Zhao Sanchuan1,Pang Xixi1,Zhang Anni1,Li Chenning1,Lin Yuxuan1ORCID,Du Xiaomeng2ORCID,Cui Lei1,Yang Zhenhua1,Hao Tailang1ORCID,Wang Chaopeng1,Yin Jun1,Xie Wei2ORCID,Zhu Jian134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Materials Science and Engineering, National Institute for Advanced Materials, Smart Sensing Interdisciplinary Science Center, Nankai University, Tianjin 300350, P. R. China.

2. College of Chemistry, Nankai University, Tianjin 300071, P. R. China.

3. Tianjin Key Laboratory of Metal and Molecule-Based Material Chemistry, Nankai University, Tianjin 300350, P. R. China.

4. Tianjin Key Laboratory for Rare Earth Materials and Applications, Nankai University, Tianjin 300350, P. R. China.

Abstract

Flexible and stretchable thin-film transistors (TFTs) are crucial in skin-like electronics for wearable and implantable applications. Such electronics are usually constrained in performance owing to a lack of high-mobility and stretchable semiconducting channels. Tellurium, a rising semiconductor with superior charge carrier mobilities, has been limited by its intrinsic brittleness and anisotropy. Here, we achieve highly oriented arrays of tellurium nanowires (TeNWs) on various substrates with wafer-scale scalability by a facile lock-and-shear strategy. Such an assembly approach mimics the alignment process of the trailing tentacles of a swimming jellyfish. We further apply these TeNW arrays in high-mobility TFTs and logic gates with improved flexibility and stretchability. More specifically, mobilities over 100 square centimeters per volt per second and on/off ratios of ~10 4 are achieved in TeNW-TFTs. The TeNW-TFTs on polyethylene terephthalate can sustain an omnidirectional bending strain of 1.3% for more than 1000 cycles. Furthermore, TeNW-TFTs on an elastomeric substrate can withstand a unidirectional strain of 40% with no performance degradation.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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