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Dive into the research topics where Ting Lei is active.

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Featured researches published by Ting Lei.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Mechanically Durable and Highly Stretchable Transistors Employing Carbon Nanotube Semiconductor and Electrodes

Alex Chortos; Ghada I. Koleilat; Raphael Pfattner; Desheng Kong; Pei Lin; Roda Nur; Ting Lei; Huiliang Wang; Nan Liu; Ying-Chih Lai; Myung-Gil Kim; Jong Won Chung; Sangyoon Lee; Zhenan Bao

Mechanically durable stretchable trans-istors are fabricated using carbon nanotube electrical components and tough thermoplastic elastomers. After an initial conditioning step, the electrical characteristics remain constant with strain. The strain-dependent characteristics are similar in orthogonal stretching directions. Devices can be impacted with a hammer and punctured with a needle while remaining functional and stretchable.


Small | 2015

Solvent Effects on Polymer Sorting of Carbon Nanotubes with Applications in Printed Electronics

Huiliang Wang; Bing Hsieh; Gonzalo Jiménez-Osés; Peng Liu; Christopher J. Tassone; Ying Diao; Ting Lei; K. N. Houk; Zhenan Bao

Regioregular poly(3-alkylthiophene) (P3AT) polymers have been previously reported for the selective, high-yield dispersion of semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) in toluene. Here, five alternative solvents are investigated, namely, tetrahydrofuran, decalin, tetralin, m-xylene, and o-xylene, for the dispersion of SWCNTs by poly(3-dodecylthiophene) P3DDT. The dispersion yield could be increased to over 40% using decalin or o-xylene as the solvents while maintaining high selectivity towards semiconducting SWCNTs. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations in explicit solvents are used to explain the improved sorting yield. In addition, a general mechanism is proposed to explain the selective dispersion of semiconducting SWCNTs by conjugated polymers. The possibility to perform selective sorting of semiconducting SWCNTs using various solvents provides a greater diversity of semiconducting SWCNT ink properties, such as boiling point, viscosity, and surface tension as well as toxicity. The efficacy of these new semiconducting SWCNT inks is demonstrated by using the high boiling point and high viscosity solvent tetralin for inkjet-printed transistors, where solvent properties are more compatible with the inkjet printing head and improved droplet formation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Biocompatible and totally disintegrable semiconducting polymer for ultrathin and ultralightweight transient electronics

Ting Lei; Ming Guan; Jia Liu; Hung-Cheng Lin; Raphael Pfattner; Leo Shaw; Allister F. McGuire; Tsung-Ching Huang; Leilai Shao; Kwang-Ting Cheng; Jeffrey B.-H. Tok; Zhenan Bao

Significance Organic electronics, particularly polymers, can be synthesized and processed with low temperatures and, more importantly, have the potential to be environmentally benign candidates for electronic applications. However, there has been no report of totally decomposable polymer semiconductors. Their availability will enable low-cost and fully disintegrable transient electronics. We have developed an innovative concept based on imine chemistry that allows totally disintegrable and biocompatible semiconducting polymers. Using an ultrathin biodegradable substrate, we successfully fabricated polymer transistors and logic circuits that show high performance and are ultralightweight, but they can be fully disintegrable. Our work significantly advances organic materials to enable environmentally friendly and biointegrated electronic applications. Increasing performance demands and shorter use lifetimes of consumer electronics have resulted in the rapid growth of electronic waste. Currently, consumer electronics are typically made with nondecomposable, nonbiocompatible, and sometimes even toxic materials, leading to serious ecological challenges worldwide. Here, we report an example of totally disintegrable and biocompatible semiconducting polymers for thin-film transistors. The polymer consists of reversible imine bonds and building blocks that can be easily decomposed under mild acidic conditions. In addition, an ultrathin (800-nm) biodegradable cellulose substrate with high chemical and thermal stability is developed. Coupled with iron electrodes, we have successfully fabricated fully disintegrable and biocompatible polymer transistors. Furthermore, disintegrable and biocompatible pseudo-complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) flexible circuits are demonstrated. These flexible circuits are ultrathin (<1 μm) and ultralightweight (∼2 g/m2) with low operating voltage (4 V), yielding potential applications of these disintegrable semiconducting polymers in low-cost, biocompatible, and ultralightweight transient electronics.


Small | 2015

Diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP)‐Based Donor–Acceptor Polymers for Selective Dispersion of Large‐Diameter Semiconducting Carbon Nanotubes

Ting Lei; Ying-Chih Lai; Guosong Hong; Huiliang Wang; Pascal Hayoz; R. Thomas Weitz; Changxin Chen; Hongjie Dai; Zhenan Bao

Low-bandgap diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP)-based polymers are used for the selective dispersion of semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (s-SWCNTs). Through rational molecular design to tune the polymer-SWCNT interactions, highly selective dispersions of s-SWCNTs with diameters mainly around 1.5 nm are achieved. The influences of the polymer alkyl side-chain substitution (i.e., branched vs linear side chains) on the dispersing yield and selectivity of s-SWCNTs are investigated. Introducing linear alkyl side chains allows increased polymer-SWCNT interactions through close π-π stacking and improved C-H-π interactions. This work demonstrates that polymer side-chain engineering is an effective method to modulate the polymer-SWCNT interactions and thereby affecting both critical parameters in dispersing yield and selectivity. Using these sorted s-SWCNTs, high-performance SWCNT network thin-film transistors are fabricated. The solution-deposited s-SWCNT transistors yield simultaneously high mobilities of 41.2 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1) and high on/off ratios of greater than 10(4) . In summary, low-bandgap DPP donor-acceptor polymers are a promising class of polymers for selective dispersion of large-diameter s-SWCNTs.


Science Advances | 2017

Ultratransparent and stretchable graphene electrodes

Nan Liu; Alex Chortos; Ting Lei; Lihua Jin; Taeho Roy Kim; Won-Gyu Bae; Chenxin Zhu; Sihong Wang; Raphael Pfattner; Xiyuan Chen; Robert Sinclair; Zhenan Bao

A new graphene structure allowing unprecedented stretchability in graphene electrodes was designed. Two-dimensional materials, such as graphene, are attractive for both conventional semiconductor applications and nascent applications in flexible electronics. However, the high tensile strength of graphene results in fracturing at low strain, making it challenging to take advantage of its extraordinary electronic properties in stretchable electronics. To enable excellent strain-dependent performance of transparent graphene conductors, we created graphene nanoscrolls in between stacked graphene layers, referred to as multilayer graphene/graphene scrolls (MGGs). Under strain, some scrolls bridged the fragmented domains of graphene to maintain a percolating network that enabled excellent conductivity at high strains. Trilayer MGGs supported on elastomers retained 65% of their original conductance at 100% strain, which is perpendicular to the direction of current flow, whereas trilayer films of graphene without nanoscrolls retained only 25% of their starting conductance. A stretchable all-carbon transistor fabricated using MGGs as electrodes exhibited a transmittance of >90% and retained 60% of its original current output at 120% strain (parallel to the direction of charge transport). These highly stretchable and transparent all-carbon transistors could enable sophisticated stretchable optoelectronics.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Quadruple H-Bonding Cross-Linked Supramolecular Polymeric Materials as Substrates for Stretchable, Antitearing, and Self-Healable Thin Film Electrodes

Xuzhou Yan; Zhiyuan Liu; Qiuhong Zhang; Jeffrey Lopez; Hui Wang; Hung-Chin Wu; Simiao Niu; Hongping Yan; Sihong Wang; Ting Lei; Junheng Li; Dianpeng Qi; Pingao Huang; Jianping Huang; Yu Zhang; Yuanyuan Wang; Guanglin Li; Jeffery B.-H. Tok; Xiaodong Chen; Zhenan Bao

Herein, we report a de novo chemical design of supramolecular polymer materials (SPMs-1-3) by condensation polymerization, consisting of (i) soft polymeric chains (polytetramethylene glycol and tetraethylene glycol) and (ii) strong and reversible quadruple H-bonding cross-linkers (from 0 to 30 mol %). The former contributes to the formation of the soft domain of the SPMs, and the latter furnishes the SPMs with desirable mechanical properties, thereby producing soft, stretchable, yet tough elastomers. The resulting SPM-2 was observed to be highly stretchable (up to 17u202f000% strain), tough (fracture energy ∼30u202f000 J/m2), and self-healing, which are highly desirable properties and are superior to previously reported elastomers and tough hydrogels. Furthermore, a gold, thin film electrode deposited on this SPM substrate retains its conductivity and combines high stretchability (∼400%), fracture/notch insensitivity, self-healing, and good interfacial adhesion with the gold film. Again, these properties are all highly complementary to commonly used polydimethylsiloxane-based thin film metal electrodes. Last, we proceed to demonstrate the practical utility of our fabricated electrode via both in vivo and in vitro measurements of electromyography signals. This fundamental understanding obtained from the investigation of these SPMs will facilitate the progress of intelligent soft materials and flexible electronics.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

Enhancement of ambipolar characteristics in single-walled carbon nanotubes using C60 and fabrication of logic gates

Steve Park; Ji Hyun Nam; Ja Hoon Koo; Ting Lei; Zhenan Bao

We demonstrate a technique to convert p-type single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) network transistor into ambipolar transistor by thermally evaporating C60 on top. The addition of C60 was observed to have two effects in enhancing ambipolar characteristics. First, C60 served as an encapsulating layer that enhanced the ambipolar characteristics of SWNTs. Second, C60 itself served as an electron transporting layer that contributed to the n-type conduction. Such a dual effect enables effective conversion of p-type into ambipolar characteristics. We have fabricated inverters using our SWNT/C60 ambipolar transistors with gain as high as 24, along with adaptive NAND and NOR logic gates.


Advanced Materials | 2018

Charge‐Trapping‐Induced Non‐Ideal Behaviors in Organic Field‐Effect Transistors

Hio-Ieng Un; Peng Cheng; Ting Lei; Chi-Yuan Yang; Jie-Yu Wang; Jian Pei

Organic field-effect transistors (OFETs) with impressively high hole mobilities over 10 cm2 V-1 s-1 and electron mobilities over 1 cm2 V-1 s-1 have been reported in the past few years. However, significant non-ideal electrical characteristics, e.g., voltage-dependent mobilities, have been widely observed in both small-molecule and polymer systems. This issue makes the accurate evaluation of the electrical performance impossible and also limits the practical applications of OFETs. Here, a semiconductor-unrelated, charge-trapping-induced non-ideality in OFETs is reported, and a revised model for the non-ideal transfer characteristics is provided. The trapping process can be directly observed using scanning Kelvin probe microscopy. It is found that such trapping-induced non-ideality exists in OFETs with different types of charge carriers (p-type or n-type), different types of dielectric materials (inorganic and organic) that contain different functional groups (uf8ffOH, uf8ffNH2 , uf8ffCOOH, etc.). As fas as it is known, this is the first report for the non-ideal transport behaviors in OFETs caused by semiconductor-independent charge trapping. This work reveals the significant role of dielectric charge trapping in the non-ideal transistor characteristics and also provides guidelines for device engineering toward ideal OFETs.


international symposium on circuits and systems | 2017

Robust design and design automation for flexible hybrid electronics

Tsung-Ching Huang; Leilai Shao; Ting Lei; Raymond G. Beausoleil; Zhenan Bao; Kwang-Ting Cheng

Flexible electronics is promising for a number of emerging applications such as foldable smartphone, wearables and internet of things (IoT) [1], [2], [3]. However, the key elements of flexible electronics, the thin-film transistors (TFT), often suffer from large process variations and inferior reliability. There is also a lack of trustworthy compact models for these devices. This paper gives an overview of design challenges for the flexible circuits, introduces a robust design style, Pseudo-CMOS, that has been widely used for digital TFT designs, and highlights the development of a flexible hybrid electronics process design kit (FHE-PDK) supporting design automation and verification of flexible hybrid electronics.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Unraveling the Solution-State Supramolecular Structures of Donor–Acceptor Polymers and their Influence on Solid-State Morphology and Charge-Transport Properties

Yu-Qing Zheng; Ze-Fan Yao; Ting Lei; Jin-Hu Dou; Chi-Yuan Yang; Lin Zou; Xiangyi Meng; Wei Ma; Jie-Yu Wang; Jian Pei

Polymer self-assembly in solution prior to film fabrication makes solution-state structures critical for their solid-state packing and optoelectronic properties. However, unraveling the solution-state supramolecular structures is challenging, not to mention establishing a clear relationship between the solution-state structure and the charge-transport properties in field-effect transistors. Here, for the first time, it is revealed that the thin-film morphology of a conjugated polymer inherits the features of its solution-state supramolecular structures. A solution-state supramolecular structure control strategy is proposed to increase the electron mobility of a benzodifurandione-based oligo(p-phenylene vinylene) (BDOPV)-based polymer. It is shown that the solution-state structures of the BDOPV-based conjugated polymer can be tuned such that it forms a 1D rod-like structure in good solvent and a 2D lamellar structure in poor solvent. By tuning the solution-state structure, films with high crystallinity and good interdomain connectivity are obtained. The electron mobility significantly increases from the original value of 1.8 to 3.2 cm2 V-1 s-1 . This work demonstrates that solution-state supramolecular structure control is critical for understanding and optimization of the thin-film morphology and charge-transport properties of conjugated polymers.

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Leilai Shao

University of California

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Kwang-Ting Cheng

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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