APS Logo

Steady-State and Transient Behavior of Ionic Liquid Crystal Elastomers Based Organic Electrochemical Transistors

ORAL

Abstract

Recently, organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs) have received lots of attention for variety of applications, particularly in the areas of bioelectronics, due to attractive characteristics, such as low voltage operation, flexibility, high transconductance and biocompatibility. [1–3] Our present study is motivated by ionic electroactive polymers (iEAPs) [4,5] and the new class of material-ionic liquid crystal elastomers (iLCEs) [6]. Here, we report a novel flexible OECT based on iLCE solid electrolyte. More importantly, this transistor does not require a substrate as traditional transistor does. The effect of molecular alignment (planar, homeotropic, hybrid and isotropic) of the solid electrolyte (iLCE) on the steady-state (transfer and output) and transient behavior of the transistor is studied.

[1] J. Rivnay et al., Nat. Rev. Mater. 3, (2018).
[2] V. Kaphle et al., Nat. Commun. 11, (2020).
[3] P. R. Paudel et al., Adv. Funct. Mater. 11, 2004939 (2020).
[4] C. P. H. Rajapaksha et al., Macromol. Rapid Commun. 41, 1900636 (2020).
[5] C. R. Piedrahita et al., ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 12, 16978 (2020).
[6] C. Feng et al., Macromol. Rapid Commun. 40, 1900299 (2019).

Presenters

  • Chathuranga Prageeth Rajapaksha

    Department of Physics, Kent State University

Authors

  • Chathuranga Prageeth Rajapaksha

    Department of Physics, Kent State University

  • Pushpa Paudel

    Kent State University, Department of Physics, Kent State University

  • P M Sineth Gayashan Kodikara

    Department of Physics, Kent State University

  • Drona Dahal

    Kent State University, Department of Physics, Kent State University

  • Chenrun Feng

    Kent State University, Advanced Materials and Liquid Crystal Institute, Kent State University

  • Vikash Kaphle

    Kent State University, School of Polymer Science and Engineering, The University of Southern Mississippi

  • Bjorn Lussem

    Kent State University

  • Antal Istvan Jakli

    Kent State University, Advanced Materials and Liquid Crystal Institute, Kent State University