Ultrafast laser pulses enable one-step graphene patterning on woods and leaves for green electronics

Fast, simple, cost-efficient, eco-friendly, and design-flexible patterning of high-quality graphene from abundant natural resources is of immense interest for the mass production of next-generation graphene-based green electronics. Most electronic components have been manufactured by repetitive phot...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Le, Truong-Son Dinh, Park, Sangbaek, An, Jianing, Lee, Pooi See, Kim, Young-Jin
Other Authors: School of Materials Science and Engineering
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/149768
Description
Summary:Fast, simple, cost-efficient, eco-friendly, and design-flexible patterning of high-quality graphene from abundant natural resources is of immense interest for the mass production of next-generation graphene-based green electronics. Most electronic components have been manufactured by repetitive photolithography processes involving a large number of masks, photoresists, and toxic etchants; resulting in slow, complex, expensive, less-flexible, and often corrosive electronics manufacturing processes to date. Here, a one-step formation and patterning of highly conductive graphene on natural woods and leaves by programmable irradiation of ultrafast high-photon-energy laser pulses in ambient air is presented. Direct photoconversion of woods and leaves into graphene is realized at a low temperature by intense ultrafast light pulses with controlled fluences. Green graphene electronic components of electrical interconnects, flexible temperature sensors, and energy-storing pseudocapacitors are fabricated from woods and leaves. This direct graphene synthesis is a breakthrough toward biocompatible, biodegradable, and eco-friendlily manufactured green electronics for the sustainable earth.