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Last updated: 2010-02-09 by by Therese Winder therese.winder@liu.se
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Super material will make lighting cheaper and fully recyclable

LEC light

With the use of the new super material graphene, Swedish and American researchers have succeeded in producing a new type of lighting component. It is inexpensive to produce and can be fully recycled.

The invention, which paves the way for glowing wallpaper made entirely of plastic, for example, is published in the scientific journal ACS Nano by scientists at Linköping University and Umeå University, in Sweden, and Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey.

Ultra-thin and electricity-saving organic light diodes, so-called OLEDs, have recently been introduced commercially in mobile phones, cameras, and super-thin TVs. An OLED consists of a light-generating layer of plastic placed between two electrodes, one of which must be transparent. Today’s OLEDs have two drawbacks – they are relatively expensive to produce, and the transparent electrode consists of the metal alloy indium tin oxide. The latter presents a problem because indium is both rare and expensive and moreover is complicated to recycle. Now researchers at Linköping and Umeå universities, working with American colleagues, are presenting an alternative to OLEDs, an organic light-emitting electrochemical cell (LEC). It is inexpensive to produce, and the transparent electrode is made of the carbon material graphene.

“This is a major step forward in the development of organic lighting components, from both a technological and an environmental perspective. Organic electronics components promise to become extremely common in exciting new applications in the future, but this can create major recycling problems. By using graphene instead of conventional metal electrodes, components of the future will be much easier to recycle and thereby environmentally attractive,” says one of the scientists, Nathaniel Robinson from Linköping University.

Since all the LEC’s parts can be produced from liquid solutions, it will also be possible to make LECs in a roll-to-roll process on, for example, a printing press in a highly cost-effective way.

“This paves the way for inexpensive production of entirely plastic-based lighting and display components in the form of large flexible sheets. This kind of illumination or display can be rolled up or can be applied as wallpaper or on ceilings,” says another of the scientists, Ludvig Edman from Umeå University.

Graphene consists of a single layer of carbon atoms and has many attractive properties as an electronic material. It has high conductivity, is virtually transparent, and can moreover be produced as a solution in the form of graphene oxide.

Researchers all over the world have been trying to replace indium tin oxide for more than 15 years. Indium is in short supply, and the alloy has a complicated life cycle. The raw material for the fully organic and metal-free LEC, on the other hand, is inexhaustible and can be fully recycled – as fuel, for example.

The study is published in the journal ACS Nano and is titled “Graphene and mobile ions: the key to all-plastic, solution-processed light-emitting devices.” The authors are Piotr Matyba, Hisato Yamaguchi, Goki Eda, Manish Chhowalla, Ludvig Edman, and Nathaniel D. Robinson..

For further information, please contact:

Ludvig Edman, professor of physics at Umeå University
Phone: +46 (0)90-7865732 (work); +46 (0)70-2321240 (mobile)
E-mail: ludvig.edman@physics.umu.se

Nathaniel D. Robinson, associate professor Linköping University
Phone: +46 (0)11-363479
E-mail: nathaniel.d.robinson@liu.se

Therese Winder 2010-02-09

Permanent link to this story

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Breakthrough for the super material graphene

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€ 630,000 for public transport research

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LiU receives funding for Working Life and Social Research

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Jonte Bernhard, docent at the Department of Science and Technology (ITN), has been awarded a grant from NordForsk to coordinate the research network, Nordic Network for Engineering Education Research.

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In brief

 

Trainee at Microsoft

When the software giant Microsoft advertised for trainees they had 400 applicants. Three were accepted and one of them is Helen Mischel, engineering graduate from the IT programme at LiU. Her trainee position is that of product manager for Windows Live.

Eurostudent – Sweden participates in large student survey

Eurostudent, a survey about students’ social and financial conditions, is currently under way in over 30 European countries. The Swedish National Agency for Higher Education together with Statistics Sweden is responsible for the Swedish submission and has selected 5,000 students to answer the questions that have been issued by post. Most of the participating countries use the same questions to facilitate comparison of the results.

English universities introduce fast tracks

The traditional English three-year university degree is now threatened by financial cuts. Universities have been tasked with developing more flexible programmes, especially two-year fast tracks, to reduce the cost of education for both students and tax payers. These fast track degrees have already been trialled at five universities, with one consequence being an extension of the academic year by 10 weeks. Source:HSV

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