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'Nano-pixels' promise thin, flexible high-res displays

A new discovery that makes it possible to create pixels just a few hundred nanometers across could pave the way for extremely high-resolution and low-energy thin, flexible displays for applications such as "smart" glasses, synthetic retinas, and foldable screens.

At around 70 micrometers across, each one of these images is, astoundingly, smaller than the width of a human hair. [Photo: Oxford University]

 

 

A team led by Oxford University scientists explored the link between the electrical and optical properties of phase-change materials (materials that can change from an amorphous to a crystalline state). They found that by sandwiching a 7-nanometer-thick layer of a phase-change material (GST) between two layers of a transparent electrode, they could use a tiny current to "draw" images within the sandwich "stack."

Initially still images were created using an atomic force microscope, but the team went on to demonstrate that such tiny "stacks" can be turned into prototype pixel-like devices. These "nano-pixels" -- just 300 by 300 nanometers in size -- can be electrically switched on and off at will, creating the colored dots that would form the building blocks of an extremely high-resolution display technology.

A report of the research was published July 9 in this week's Nature.

While the work is still in its early stages, realizing its potential, the Oxford team has filed a patent on the discovery with the help of Isis Innovation, Oxford University's technology commercialization company. Isis is now discussing the displays with companies who are interested in assessing the technology, and with investors.

"We didn't set out to invent a new kind of display," said Professor Harish Bhaskaran of Oxford University's Department of Materials, who led the research. "We were exploring the relationship between the electrical and optical properties of phase-change materials and then had the idea of creating this GST 'sandwich' made up of layers just a few nanometers thick. We found that not only were we able to create images in the stack but, to our surprise, thinner layers of GST actually gave us better contrast. We also discovered that altering the size of the bottom electrode layer enabled us to change the color of the image."

The layers of the GST sandwich are created using a sputtering technique where a target is bombarded with high-energy particles so that atoms from the target are deposited onto another material as a thin film.

"Because the layers that make up our devices can be deposited as thin films, they can be incorporated into very thin flexible materials -- we have already demonstrated that the technique works on flexible Mylar sheets around 200 nanometers thick," said Professor Bhaskaran. "This makes them potentially useful for 'smart' glasses, foldable screens, windshield displays, and even synthetic retinas that mimic the abilities of photoreceptor cells in the human eye."

Peiman Hosseini of Oxford University's Department of Materials, first author of the paper, said: "Our models are so good at predicting the experiment that we can tune our prototype 'pixels' to create any color we want -- including the primary colors needed for a display. One of the advantages of our design is that, unlike most conventional LCD screens, there would be no need to constantly refresh all pixels, you would only have to refresh those pixels that actually change (static pixels remain as they were). This means that any display based on this technology would have extremely low energy consumption."

The research suggests that flexible paper-thin displays based on the technology could have the capacity to switch between a power-saving "color e-reader mode" and a backlit display capable of showing video. Such displays could be created using cheap materials and, because they would be solid-state, promise to be reliable and easy to manufacture. The tiny 'nano-pixels' make it ideal for applications, such as smart glasses, where an image would be projected at a larger size because, even enlarged, they would offer very high resolution.

Professor David Wright of the Department of Engineering at the University of Exeter, co-author of the paper, said: "Along with many other researchers around the world, we have been looking into the use of these GST materials for memory applications for many years, but no one before thought of combining their electrical and optical functionality to provide entirely new kinds of non-volatile, high-resolution, electronic color displays -- so our work is a real breakthrough."

Professor Bhaskaran said that the discovery would not have been possible without the support of the UK's Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC): "EPSRC have been funding our fundamental research, and this chance discovery shows just where support for so-called 'blue skies' research can lead."

The phase-change material used was the alloy Ge2Sb2Te5 (Germanium-Antimony-Tellurium or GST) sandwiched between electrode layers made of indium tin oxide (ITO).

Source: Oxford University

Published July 2014

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