Kiyoshi Yase (Deputy Director) of the Photonics Research Institute and Hirobumi Ushijima (Leader) of the Bio-Photonics Group, the Photonics Research Institute (Director: Masanobu Watanabe) of the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) (President: Hiroyuki Yoshikawa), and the Japan Chemical Innovation Institute (JCII) (President: Kunio Nakajima) have jointly succeeded in fabricating a flexible electronic device by printing an array of organic thin-film transistors (organic TFTs) onto a plastic film (Figure 1).
By using a large-area, high-precision printing technique based on the microcontact printing method, we successfully realized patterning with lines/spaces = 1 µm/1 µm over a 6-inch diameter. We also successfully printed an organic TFT array using poly(3-hexylthiophene) as the semiconductor and silver nanoparticles as the electrodes on a plastic substrate.
The operational electrical device was fabricated by a printing method in which all the materials were converted into inks, and no vacuum processes were necessary. The results represent a major step toward commercially viable processes for producing flexible displays and organic devices by large-area high-speed printing methods such as roll-to-roll printing. It also contributes to the realization of an ubiquitous information society.
The results of this study are to be announced at the 11th International Conference on Electrical and Related Properties of Organic Solids, to be held in Poland on July 13–17, 2008.



