Hiroaki Jinno
University of Tokyo
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Publication
Featured researches published by Hiroaki Jinno.
Nature Communications | 2015
Naoji Matsuhisa; Martin Kaltenbrunner; Tomoyuki Yokota; Hiroaki Jinno; Kazunori Kuribara; Tsuyoshi Sekitani; Takao Someya
The development of advanced flexible large-area electronics such as flexible displays and sensors will thrive on engineered functional ink formulations for printed electronics where the spontaneous arrangement of molecules aids the printing processes. Here we report a printable elastic conductor with a high initial conductivity of 738 S cm−1 and a record high conductivity of 182 S cm−1 when stretched to 215% strain. The elastic conductor ink is comprised of Ag flakes, a fluorine rubber and a fluorine surfactant. The fluorine surfactant constitutes a key component which directs the formation of surface-localized conductive networks in the printed elastic conductor, leading to a high conductivity and stretchability. We demonstrate the feasibility of our inks by fabricating a stretchable organic transistor active matrix on a rubbery stretchability-gradient substrate with unimpaired functionality when stretched to 110%, and a wearable electromyogram sensor printed onto a textile garment.
Science Advances | 2016
Tomoyuki Yokota; Peter Zalar; Martin Kaltenbrunner; Hiroaki Jinno; Naoji Matsuhisa; Hiroki Kitanosako; Yutaro Tachibana; Wakako Yukita; Mari Koizumi; Takao Someya
Optoelectronic electronic skins, or e-skins, introduce electronic sensing and displays on the surface of human skin. Thin-film electronics intimately laminated onto the skin imperceptibly equip the human body with electronic components for health-monitoring and information technologies. When electronic devices are worn, the mechanical flexibility and/or stretchability of thin-film devices helps to minimize the stress and discomfort associated with wear because of their conformability and softness. For industrial applications, it is important to fabricate wearable devices using processing methods that maximize throughput and minimize cost. We demonstrate ultraflexible and conformable three-color, highly efficient polymer light-emitting diodes (PLEDs) and organic photodetectors (OPDs) to realize optoelectronic skins (oe-skins) that introduce multiple electronic functionalities such as sensing and displays on the surface of human skin. The total thickness of the devices, including the substrate and encapsulation layer, is only 3 μm, which is one order of magnitude thinner than the epidermal layer of human skin. By integrating green and red PLEDs with OPDs, we fabricate an ultraflexible reflective pulse oximeter. The device unobtrusively measures the oxygen concentration of blood when laminated on a finger. On-skin seven-segment digital displays and color indicators can visualize data directly on the body.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018
Xiaomin Xu; Kenjiro Fukuda; Akchheta Karki; Sungjun Park; Hiroki Kimura; Hiroaki Jinno; Nobuhiro Watanabe; Shuhei Yamamoto; Satoru Shimomura; Daisuke Kitazawa; Tomoyuki Yokota; Shinjiro Umezu; Thuc-Quyen Nguyen; Takao Someya
Significance We have developed an ultraflexible organic photovoltaic (OPV) that achieves sufficient thermal stability of up to 120 °C and a high power conversion efficiency of 10% with a total thickness of 3 μm. By combining an inherently stable donor:acceptor blend as the active layer and ultrathin substrate and barriers with excellent thermal capability, we were able to overcome the trade-offs between efficiency, stability, and device thickness. The ultraflexible and thermally stable OPV can be easily integrated into textiles through the commercially available hot-melt process without causing performance degradation, thereby presenting great potential as a ubiquitous and wearable power source in daily life. Flexible photovoltaics with extreme mechanical compliance present appealing possibilities to power Internet of Things (IoT) sensors and wearable electronic devices. Although improvement in thermal stability is essential, simultaneous achievement of high power conversion efficiency (PCE) and thermal stability in flexible organic photovoltaics (OPVs) remains challenging due to the difficulties in maintaining an optimal microstructure of the active layer under thermal stress. The insufficient thermal capability of a plastic substrate and the environmental influences cannot be fully expelled by ultrathin barrier coatings. Here, we have successfully fabricated ultraflexible OPVs with initial efficiencies of up to 10% that can endure temperatures of over 100 °C, maintaining 80% of the initial efficiency under accelerated testing conditions for over 500 hours in air. Particularly, we introduce a low-bandgap poly(benzodithiophene-cothieno[3,4-b]thiophene) (PBDTTT) donor polymer that forms a sturdy microstructure when blended with a fullerene acceptor. We demonstrate a feasible way to adhere ultraflexible OPVs onto textiles through a hot-melt process without causing severe performance degradation.
Nature | 2018
Sungjun Park; Soo Won Heo; Wonryung Lee; Daishi Inoue; Zhi Jiang; Kilho Yu; Hiroaki Jinno; Daisuke Hashizume; Masaki Sekino; Tomoyuki Yokota; Kenjiro Fukuda; Keisuke Tajima; Takao Someya
Next-generation biomedical devices1–9 will need to be self-powered and conformable to human skin or other tissue. Such devices would enable the accurate and continuous detection of physiological signals without the need for an external power supply or bulky connecting wires. Self-powering functionality could be provided by flexible photovoltaics that can adhere to moveable and complex three-dimensional biological tissues1–4 and skin5–9. Ultra-flexible organic power sources10–13 that can be wrapped around an object have proven mechanical and thermal stability in long-term operation13, making them potentially useful in human-compatible electronics. However, the integration of these power sources with functional electric devices including sensors has not yet been demonstrated because of their unstable output power under mechanical deformation and angular change. Also, it will be necessary to minimize high-temperature and energy-intensive processes10,12 when fabricating an integrated power source and sensor, because such processes can damage the active material of the functional device and deform the few-micrometre-thick polymeric substrates. Here we realize self-powered ultra-flexible electronic devices that can measure biometric signals with very high signal-to-noise ratios when applied to skin or other tissue. We integrated organic electrochemical transistors used as sensors with organic photovoltaic power sources on a one-micrometre-thick ultra-flexible substrate. A high-throughput room-temperature moulding process was used to form nano-grating morphologies (with a periodicity of 760 nanometres) on the charge transporting layers. This substantially increased the efficiency of the organophotovoltaics, giving a high power-conversion efficiency that reached 10.5 per cent and resulted in a high power-per-weight value of 11.46 watts per gram. The organic electrochemical transistors exhibited a transconductance of 0.8 millisiemens and fast responsivity above one kilohertz under physiological conditions, which resulted in a maximum signal-to-noise ratio of 40.02 decibels for cardiac signal detection. Our findings offer a general platform for next-generation self-powered electronics.Detection of biometric signals by self-powered electronic devices that are highly flexible and can be applied to skin.
Advanced Materials | 2018
Sungjun Park; Kenjiro Fukuda; Ming Wang; Chulhyo Lee; Tomoyuki Yokota; Hanbit Jin; Hiroaki Jinno; Hiroki Kimura; Peter Zalar; Naoji Matsuhisa; Shinjiro Umezu; Guillermo C. Bazan; Takao Someya
Flexible organic optoelectronic devices simultaneously targeting mechanical conformability and fast responsivity in the near-infrared (IR) region are a prerequisite to expand the capabilities of practical optical science and engineering for on-skin optoelectronic applications. Here, an ultraflexible near-IR responsive skin-conformal photoplethysmogram sensor based on a bulk heterojunction photovoltaic active layer containing regioregular polyindacenodithiophene-pyridyl[2,1,3]thiadiazole-cyclopentadithiophene (PIPCP) is reported. The ultrathin (3 µm thick) photodetector exhibits unprecedented operational stability under severe mechanical deformation at a bending radius of less than 3 µm, even after more than 103 bending cycles. Deliberate optimization of the physical dimensions of the active layer used in the device enables precise on/off switching and high device yield simultaneously. The response frequency over 1 kHz under mechanically deformed conditions facilitates conformal electronic sensors at the machine/human interface. Finally, a mechanically stretchable, flexible, and skin-conformal photoplethysmogram (PPG) device with higher sensitivity than those of rigid devices is demonstrated, through conformal adherence to the flexuous surface of a fingerprint.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017
Yasutoshi Jimbo; Naoji Matsuhisa; Wonryung Lee; Peter Zalar; Hiroaki Jinno; Tomoyuki Yokota; Masaki Sekino; Takao Someya
Flexible, transparent electrodes are a crucial component for future implantable and wearable systems. For practical applications, conductivity and flexibility should be further improved to prevent signal attenuation, heat generation, and disconnection. Herein, we fabricate an ultraflexible transparent electrode with low sheet resistance (8.6 Ω/sq) using an indium-tin-oxide/Au/indium-tin-oxide (ITO) multilayer on a 1 μm thick parylene substrate. The electrodes were foldable and when compared to pristine ITO displayed greater mechanical robustness. Applicability for large-area applications was confirmed through electrochemical impedance measurements, and the compatibility of electrode arrays for in vivo applications was demonstrated with an optogenetic experiment. As a result of the ultraflexible transparent electrodes excellent conformity to soft tissue, voltage signals induced by light stimulation directly below the electrode were successfully recorded on the moving muscle.
Nature Energy | 2017
Hiroaki Jinno; Kenjiro Fukuda; Xiaomin Xu; Sungjun Park; Yasuhito Suzuki; Mari Koizumi; Tomoyuki Yokota; Itaru Osaka; Kazuo Takimiya; Takao Someya
Organic Electronics | 2017
Hiroaki Jinno; Tomoyuki Yokota; Naoji Matsuhisa; Martin Kaltenbrunner; Yutaro Tachibana; Takao Someya
The Japan Society of Applied Physics | 2018
Hiroaki Jinno; Kenjiro Fukuda; Xiaomin Xu; Sungjun Park; Yasuhito Suzuki; Mari Koizumi; Tomoyuki Yokota; Itaru Osaka; Kazuo Takimiya; Takao Someya
The Japan Society of Applied Physics | 2018
Hiroki Kimura; Xiaomin Xu; Sungjun Park; Hiroaki Jinno; Masahiko Saito; Itaru Osaka; Kazuo Takimiya; Kenjiro Fukuda; Takao Someya; Shinjiro Umezu