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Fiber transistor may lead to woven circuits.


Someday, the very fabric of your shirt might contain flexible electronic devices that monitor your vital signs or enable you to dial in the color or pattern you want to wear that day. Futuristic clothing of this sort may be closer to your closet now that researchers have developed a type of transistor-on-a-fiber.

Josephine B. Lee and Vivek Subramanian of the University of California, Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley is a public research university located in Berkeley, California, United States. Commonly referred to as UC Berkeley, Berkeley and Cal  say that the perpendicular arrangement of a fabric's fibers should make it possible to wire transistors such as these new fiber ones into sensing devices, wearable displays, and other electronic devices. Conductive conductive

having the quality of readily conducting electric current.


conductive flooring
flooring or floor covering made specially conductive to electrical current, usually by the inclusion of copper wiring that is earthed
 wires among the fabric's threads would provide the transistor-to-transistor links.

Unlike conventional transistor fabrication fabrication (fab´rikā´shn),
n the construction or making of a restoration.
, which takes place at elevated temperatures and requires high precision and ultraclean conditions, making fiber transistors is "totally compatible with the weaving process," says Lee. She's slated to present this new work at an international meeting on electronic devices next month in Washington, DC.

The two researchers make their new transistors by coating hair-thin strands of aluminum with an electrically insulating film. Doing that requires oven temperatures, but the step is completed before weaving takes place. Atop the insulating film, the researchers deposit a layer of pentacene, an organic chemical that behaves as a semiconductor.

In the lab, the researchers have demonstrated another important step in making fiber-based circuits: By positioning threads across the fiber transistors, the Berkeley team can deposit thin films of gold on the fibers except in the tiny areas where the overlying overlying

suffocation of piglets by the sow. The piglets may be weak from illness or malnutrition, the sow may be clumsy or ill, the pen may be inadequate in size or poorly designed so that piglets cannot escape.
 thread masks incoming gold vapor. This process breaks the fibers into discrete transistor Transistors that are individually packaged.

The two main categories of packaging are through-hole (or leaded), and surface-mount, also known as surface mount device (SMD).

Transistor packages are made of glass, metal, ceramic or plastic.
 regions, each of which can be contacted individually with thin, metallic wires during the weaving process.

"Using the fibers of the textile as shadow masks A thin screen full of holes that adheres to the back of a color CRT's viewing glass. The electron beam is aimed through the holes in the mask onto the phosphor dots. There are generally more holes per inch than the maximum resolution obtainable from that monitor. See slot mask.  points to a possibly inexpensive way of making transistors on fabric," comments Sigurd Wagner of Princeton University Princeton University, at Princeton, N.J.; coeducational; chartered 1746, opened 1747, rechartered 1748, called the College of New Jersey until 1896. Schools and Research Facilities
. On the other hand, pentacene transistors will require additional protective coatings to prevent degradation by moisture or exposure to the air, he notes.

For tasks such as sensing body temperature, even damaged transistors might work well enough, Lee says. She and Subramanian are now at work on the next step: weaving circuit-laden cloth from the new fibers.
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Title Annotation:Electronic Thread
Author:Weiss, P.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 29, 2003
Words:359
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