This is the “mobile” era, characterized by a growing demand of flexible substrates for novel products such as curved screens, folding smartphones, and wearable devices. In this framework, plastic electronics represents a suitable technology to replace silicon-based electronics. However, up to now, little attention has been devoted to rendering this technology more environmentally sustainable. It is thus necessary to develop new eco-designed devices that allow recycling of all the components and recovering the valuable materials through sustainable methods. For the first time, we report the fabrication of organic light emitting diodes made on an as-cast biopolymeric flexible substrate. Sodium alginate is a natural biodegradable polymer derived from brown algae; it is water-soluble and easy to manipulate for the realization of flat and transparent foils using an environmentally friendly process. Thus, the active stack can be directly deposited on the biopolymer substrate in a bottom-up architecture with no need for a pretreatment or a buffer layer. In addition, the devices can be disassembled and all of the valuable materials almost entirely recovered. This result opens up new and exciting opportunities for the fabrication of electronic and optoelectronic devices with a green platform for an ambient sustainable circular economy.
Fully Recyclable OLEDs Built on a Flexible Biopolymer Substrate / Cocchi, M.; Bertoldo, M.; Seri, M.; Maccagnani, P.; Summonte, C.; Buoso, S.; Belletti, G.; Dinelli, F.; Capelli, R.. - In: ACS SUSTAINABLE CHEMISTRY & ENGINEERING. - ISSN 2168-0485. - 9:38(2021), pp. 12733-12737. [10.1021/acssuschemeng.1c03374]
Fully Recyclable OLEDs Built on a Flexible Biopolymer Substrate
Capelli R.
2021
Abstract
This is the “mobile” era, characterized by a growing demand of flexible substrates for novel products such as curved screens, folding smartphones, and wearable devices. In this framework, plastic electronics represents a suitable technology to replace silicon-based electronics. However, up to now, little attention has been devoted to rendering this technology more environmentally sustainable. It is thus necessary to develop new eco-designed devices that allow recycling of all the components and recovering the valuable materials through sustainable methods. For the first time, we report the fabrication of organic light emitting diodes made on an as-cast biopolymeric flexible substrate. Sodium alginate is a natural biodegradable polymer derived from brown algae; it is water-soluble and easy to manipulate for the realization of flat and transparent foils using an environmentally friendly process. Thus, the active stack can be directly deposited on the biopolymer substrate in a bottom-up architecture with no need for a pretreatment or a buffer layer. In addition, the devices can be disassembled and all of the valuable materials almost entirely recovered. This result opens up new and exciting opportunities for the fabrication of electronic and optoelectronic devices with a green platform for an ambient sustainable circular economy.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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