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Advances in Zinc Oxide-Based Transparent TFTs Produced at Low Temperature.

Dr Flora Li, Research Associate
Cambridge University, Department of Engineering, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
 
 
This presentation was given at Printed Electronics & Photovoltaics Europe 2010 on Apr 14, 2010.
 

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Presentation Summary

  • A brief introduction to High Target Utilization Sputtering (HiTUS) and its advantages over competing technologies.
  • The structure of the TFT devices produced by HiTUS will be presented and will detail the reproducibility of the devices together with a discussion of how the fabrication process varies the TFT parameters.
  • The performance of devices such as inverters and ring oscillators will also be demonstrated.

Speaker Biography (Flora Li)

Dr. Flora Li is a Research Associate in the Electrical Engineering Division at Cambridge University. She received the Ph.D. degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the University of Waterloo, Canada, in 2008, where she investigated the integration of organic thin film transistors. Her research interests include thin film technology and devices based on transparent conducting oxides, organic materials, nanomaterials, nanocomposites, and amorphous/nanocrystalline silicon, for applications in large area electronics and flexible electronics including displays, sensors, photovoltaics, functional windowpanes, biosensors, smart cards, etc. Dr. Li has been awarded a national Postdoctoral Fellowship (PDF) from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada in 2008. She was a Visiting Scientist at Xerox Research Centre of Canada (XRCC) from 2005-2008. She is a co-author of CCD Image Sensors in Deep-Ultraviolet (Springer, 2005).

Company Profile (University of Cambridge, Dept of Engineering)

Cambridge University Engineering Department, which was rated as a 5* Department in the last Research Assessment Exercise, has been carrying out research in thin film transistors based on amorphous silicon and other inorganic materials for more than ten years. It has a state-of-the-art clean facility within the Centre for Advanced Photonics and Electronics. This includes 160 m2 of Class 10,000 laboratories which houses a range of deposition systems for producing a diverse range of materials including metallic thin films, amorphous silicon, high-k dielectrics, carbon nanotubes and silicon nanowires. There is a further 140 m2 of Class 1,000 laboratories which includes processing facilities for 1 µm photolithography and nanoparticle-polymer composite processing. Finally, there is 140 m2 of Class 100 laboratories which includes a rapid thermal annealer, deep reactive ion etch system, liquid crystal processing facility, 0.5 µm double-sided mask aligner and an e-beam lithography system.

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