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IBM paves way for wearable electronics, folding displays

Brian Fuller

12/11/2012 5:30 PM EST

bf iedm flexible plastic
SAN FRANCISCO--Bendable smartphones and electronic newspapers that can be folded up and stuff in your pocket aren't far off if IBM has its way.

The company this week described a new, low-cost technique for manufacturing silicon-based electronics on a flexible plastic substrate. While IBM acknowledges some small transistor-performance degradations in the process, the research suggests that flexible, affordable electronics can made with conventional processes at room temperature.

Comparing the approach to other one- and two-dimensional materials that have been tried for flexible electronics, "these [other] materials still have problems such as low resistance contacts, reliable gate dielectrics,"  according to Davood Shahrjerdi, research staff member with IBM's T.J. Watson Research Center. Other approaches also may have unorthodox processes or materials, or require high temperature steps during manufacture.

IBM's approach involved controlled spalling, or flaking, which it described earlier this year as "kerfless" removal of silicon, germanium and 111-V layers. In that case, IBM was using it to enable low-power photovoltaics.

The approach is oddly simple, given the device is basically fractured and the silicon substrate peeled off, after which devices are transferred to flexible plastic tape. The devices had gate lengths of less than 30 nm and a gate pitch of 100 nm.

IBM said it yielded functional SRAM cells down to VDD=0.6V, and its ring oscillators had a stage delay of 16 ps at 0.9V, which it said was the best reported for a flexible circuit.

The process is as follows: IBM began with a substrate (extremely thin SOI-ETSOI) on top of which it deposited a nickel stressor layer, about 5-6 microns thick. (The ETSOI device was fabricated on a 22-nm CMOS process using a 300-mm wafer).

Atop the stressor layer, IBM applied a flexible polyimide tape layer. At room temperature, the researchers then initiative a "stress discontinuity" at one edge and propagate the fracture front across the surface in a "mechanically controllable" manner, Shahrjerdi said.

Next: 97% yield




iniewski

12/12/2012 10:58 AM EST

Pretty cool process...how expensive is it?

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William Miller

12/13/2012 8:29 AM EST

While it is innovative and new, it is quite expensive. The more popular and used it will be, the more pocket friendly it will be.
I think for sale they will be available only somewhere in late 2015.

William - http://www.carid.com/

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Victor.Shadan

12/13/2012 11:24 AM EST

IBM is again way ahead. But pocket cellphones, commercially? How are you going to hold these phones. Need Blue Tooth at all times. Then what happens if you need to check or take pictures. Oh of course, they will sell you a flat board to use on it. Medical usage, yes. Some audio, video units, environmental temp detections etc, yes.

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garydpdx

12/13/2012 11:41 AM EST

Look for an old sci-fi show called "Earth: Final Conflict" where video mobile phones were cylinders with pull-out flexible screens. Cool!

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John Marry

3/29/2013 6:55 AM EDT

Thanks for sharing us this fantastic post, I highly recommend that this should be read by others too.. I really appreciate this low-cost technique for manufacturing silicon-based electronics, as it looks to be very innovative and more pocket friendly.

John Marry- http://www.wheelfire.com/

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AveryLin

4/6/2013 11:18 PM EDT

Thank you for sharing us this message, I really recommend this to my friends. I highly appreciate this low-cost technique.

Avery-http://www.3dautofloormats.com

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