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Inkjet Printed Organic Light-emitting Electrochemical Cells for Disposable Lab-on-chip Applications Manufactured at Ambient Atmosphere1

Authors :
Oliver Pabst
Ramona Eberhardt
Erik Beckert
Zhe Shu
Andreas Tünnermann
Source :
Materials Today: Proceedings. 3:733-738
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

Microfluidic lab-on-a-chip devices can be used for chemical and biological analyses such as DNA tests or environmental monitoring. Such devices integrate most of the basic functionalities needed for the analysis on a microfluidic chip. When using such devices, cost and space intensive lab equipment is thus not necessary. However, in order to make a monolithic and cost-efficient/disposable sensing device, direct integration of excitation light source for fluorescent sensing is often required. Organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs) have the advantages of self-emitting property, high luminous efficiency, full-color capability, wide viewing angle, high contrast, low power consumption, low weight and flexibility. All these capacitate OLEDs to be a suitable optical source for microfluidic devices. However, low work function cathode and/or electron injection layer like Ba, LiF are indispensable for high bright OLEDs, which require vacuum deposition and inert fabrication atmosphere. Hereby we introduce a fully solution processable deviation of OLEDs, organic light-emitting electrochemical cells (OLECs) as a low-cost excitation light source for a microfluidic sensing platform. By mixing metal ions and a solid electrolyte with light-emitting polymers as active materials, an in-situ doping and in-situ PN-junction can be generated within a three layer sandwich device. Because of this doping effect, work function adaption is not necessary and air-stable cathodes like silver can be used. A manufacturing process for fully solution-processed OLECs is presented, which consist of an inkjet-printed silver cathode, spin-coated blue light-emitting polymer plus dopants and an inkjet-printed PEDOT:PSS transparent top anode. Furthermore, by replacing silver with ITO, a fully transparent blue OLEC is able to emit > 2500 cd/m 2 light under pulsed driving mode, which fulfils requirements for simple fluorescent on-chip sensing applications.

Details

ISSN :
22147853
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Materials Today: Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5d0afe1351aa4d257c7db7e4daa2d881
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.matpr.2016.02.004