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by Lay Leng TAN
Coming soon - foldable computer screens, electronic paper that fits into your pocket, and disposable smart tags.
he day you can enjoy a relaxing soak in the bath,
reading an unrolled copy of an electronic newspaper,
may not be far off. This scenario may be realised by
means of an ingenious combination of polymer and electronics
technology that allows creation of flexible displays.
Sir Richard Friend, Cavendish Professor of Physics,
Optoelectronics Group at the University of Cambridge, UK, believes
that electronic circuits based on polymer transistors are realisable
and expects products based on the technology to come onto the
market in less than five years' time.
His Cambridge team found in 1989 that passing an electric
current through certain polymers made them emit light. The group
formed Cambridge Display Technology (CDT) in 1992 to
commercialise its patented light emitting polymer (LEP) technology
derived from this discovery. It also earned Friend and his colleagues
€700,000 of a €1million European Union Descartes research
prize in 2003. In developing the polymer light-emitting diode
(PLED) display project, they aimed to construct a technology
replacing deposited-glass or silicon-backed displays with flexible
plastic substrates, allowing cheaper processing.
As an alternative to emissive flexible PLED displays, a form of
organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs), the "electronic paper" is
particularly suitable for displaying text and static images in
reflected light. Friend is also developing the core plastic electronics
circuitry at Plastic Logic, his second spinoff company, which will
enable such display devices to take off. US firm E Ink uses
electrophoresis for such a display device almost like ink on paper,
is easy to read in reflective light and flexible. It works by generating
images by means of thousands of miniscule capsules the width of
a human hair. Black and white particles inside can be switched
back and forth via a small electric voltage to display images.
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