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New device opens next chapter on E-paper.


Imagine folding up today's newspaper only to unroll it tomorrow and find tomorrow's news. Now, researchers have made a plastic electronic material that could make such fantasies come true.

With the debut of electronic ink a few years ago, researchers took a step toward meshing the data-handling power of electronics with the flexibility and convenience of paper. Such inks, developed independently by teams at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Cambridge; coeducational; chartered 1861, opened 1865 in Boston, moved 1916. It has long been recognized as an outstanding technological institute and its Sloan School of Management has notable programs in business,  (MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology ) in Cambridge and Xerox's Palo Alto Research Center Palo Alto Research Center - XEROX PARC  in California, contain particles that change a pixel's color--say, from black to white--when exposed to an electric current (SN: 6/20/98, p. 396).

Among the early uses of electronic ink were large, low-resolution store signs for promoting sales. But creating paper-thin, high-resolution displays for electronic newspapers, books, and even cereal boxes requires circuitry much more sophisticated than that needed for store displays, says John A. Rogers

Education

John Rogers is a physical chemist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. John A. Rogers obtained BA and BS degrees in chemistry and in physics from the University of Texas, Austin, in 1989.
 of Lucent Technologies in Murray Hill Murray Hill may refer to one of the following places:
  • Murray Hill, Kentucky
  • Murray Hill, Manhattan, a residential neighborhood in New York City
  • Murray Hill, Queens, a different locality in New York City
  • Murray Hill, New Jersey
  • Murray Hill, Pennsylvania
, N.J.

In the April 24 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences. , Rogers' team from Lucent and E Ink Corp. of Cambridge, Mass., reports its use of simple, inexpensive printing techniques to make the most capable E-paper yet.

"I think this is extraordinarily significant," comments Joseph Jacobson Joseph Jacobson, a native and resident of Newton, Massachusetts, is a tenured professor and head of the Molecular Machines group at the Center for Bits and Atoms at the MIT Media Lab. He is the founder of several companies including E Ink, Codon Devices, Inc. , who led the development of MIT's electronic ink. "The real dream has been to have electronic newspapers or electronic books that are manufactured in the way that you would manufacture a regular book.... This is the first time that anybody has manufactured all of the elements--meaning both the electronics and the display itself--by printing."

Conventional methods for patterning circuitry onto silicon wafers don't work well for creating complex circuits on flexible plastic. Instead, Rogers' group used a technique called microcontact printing to create arrays of transistors that control the E-paper's pixels.

The first step is to etch To create a design in a material by digging out the material. The circuit designs on printed circuit boards and chips are etched by acid. See chip and printed circuit board.  a desired circuitry pattern into a master stamp, which the scientists then use to make the several reusable plastic stamps required for production of the E-paper. Next, these stamps are "inked" with a sulfur-containing organic compound, Rogers explains.

The researchers then press a stamp onto a plastic sheet coated in gold. The transferred organic ink shields part of the gold film from an etching process that removes the exposed gold. The researchers then remove the organic ink and add a carbon-based semiconductor to the remaining gold. The semiconductor thus creates an array of transistors in the pattern that was originally etched onto the master stamp.

To Rogers, E-paper's most powerful impact could be to supplant sup·plant  
tr.v. sup·plant·ed, sup·plant·ing, sup·plants
1. To usurp the place of, especially through intrigue or underhanded tactics.

2.
 paper newspapers and books. "You could imagine making an electronic version of a newspaper that would consist of a single sheet of this electronic paper connected to the wireless Internet," says Rogers. "You could download information content, view it, interact with it, and roll it up or fold it in the same way you can a conventional newspaper, but you don't have all the waste associated with a newspaper."
COPYRIGHT 2001 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Gorman, J.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 28, 2001
Words:480
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