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Fantastic Plastic, Part 1: Polymers in Computing

Not all polymers are plastics, but all plastics are polymers. And organic (carbon-based) polymer plastics, known mostly for being insulators, in some cases make excellent conductors and semiconductors.

The term “all-polymer semiconductor” (with electrical conductivity intermediate between that of an insulator and a conductor) sounds almost like an oxymoron. Plastic is generally considered a poor medium for conducting electricity and an excellent material to resist the flow of electric current and magnetism, which is why it’s used as insulation for cables, casings and sockets.

And an all-polymer visual display unit sounds equally dubious, since the stimulated emission of light is the domain of inorganic materials such as doped metal phosphors. But light-emitting polymers (LEPs), which involve an electroluminescent conductive polymer that emits light when connected to an external voltage, are used as a thin film for full-spectrum color displays in laptops and handheld computers.

“Polymers are the key enabler in electronics, from semiconductor manufacturing, to chip packaging, to circuit boards, to display materials, to memories, to solar and wind energy devices,” explained Jeffrey T. Gotro, president of InnoCentrix, a California-based consulting firm that services companies using polymers in products.

InnoCentrix specializes in supporting customers who use polymers and composites in electronic applications such as die attach paste and film adhesives (both conductive and non-conductive), underfills and encapsulants for semiconductor and board-level packages, multilayer circuit board laminates, pre-impregnated composite fibers and composites, disk drive coatings and polymers for storage technology applications.

“Of course, long-term applied research needs to be coupled very tightly to the voice of the market to ensure that the right technology is being developed to meet the emerging market needs,” Gotro told TechNewsWorld. “This is what I call ‘customer-pull innovation’ versus ‘technology push.'”

The Polytronic Spree

Polymers are gigantic chain-like molecules that contain hundreds or even thousands of repeating units (“poly” means “many,” “mer” in chemistry means a “repeat unit”). The repeating fundamental molecular elements that make up polymer chains are called “monomers.” Polymerization is the linking process of converting a monomer or a mixture of monomers into a polymer. Plastics consist of long polymer molecules.

“Polytronics” (polymer electronics or organic electronics) is a branch of electronics that deals with conductive polymers, plastics or small molecules. It’s called “organic” electronics because the polymers and small molecules are carbon-based, like the molecules of living things. This is as opposed to traditional metal electronics, which relies on inorganic conductors such as copper or silicon.

Technological developments in the electronics and semiconductor industries have led to the creation of electroactive polymers (EAPs) — polymers that change shape on the application of voltage. The biggest application for EAPs lies in their future use as actuators and sensors, which in turn opens up applications in the fields of electronics, medical, sensing and solar energy generation.

According to a Feb. 2010 report “Global Electroactive Polymers Market (2009-14)” from Research and Markets, the global EAP market was at US$1.7 billion in 2008 and is expected to be worth $2.78 billion by 2014, growing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 8.3 percent, mainly due to the already existing demand for new applications being commercialized in the next five years. The North American market is expected to account for nearly 65 percent of the total revenues.

Demand for polymers and conductive polymers in the electronics industry will grow at a projected CAGR of 26 percent, from an estimated $1.9 billion in 2010 to about $5.9 billion in 2015, according to a Jan. 2011 report “Electronic Chemicals and Materials Market” from BCC Research in Wellesley, Mass. Most of the projected growth is attributable to conductive polymers.

All of this is, of course, amounts to only a fraction of worldwide semiconductor revenues estimated by market research firm iSuppli at $304 billion in 2010 (up from $229.5 billion in 2009). And silicon remains the principal component in the majority of semiconductor devices, most importantly integrated circuits (microchips).

But brittle, inflexible, toxic, chemical-filled silicon has to be purified in refineries before any money can be made with it — and that is a very difficult and expensive process.

As a result, chip manufacturers are always looking for viable alternatives to silicon, which is beginning to share its dominance of the semiconductor world with a range of materials based on polymers. Enter the era of organic microchips.

In a world of polymer electronics, virtually any company could become a chipmaker. A plastics fab plant does not need to be ultra-clean and expensive like silicon fab plants that require low humidity and sophisticated dust-free vacuum systems. Another advantage is that these new plastic circuits can be manufactured in a roll-to-roll apparatus like that used in producing flexible solar cells. Thanks to inks made from conductive and semiconductive polymers, it will soon be possible to print circuits on almost any surface using an inkjet printer or offset press.

Printed circuits on a roll

Printed logic circuits for RFID tags

Developers must first overcome some technical challenges related to the use of various synthetic polymers in high-tech applications. Plastic transistors have nothing like the switching speed of those made from crystalline silicon. Other potential poly downsides include possible flammability, thermal effects and the toxicity of gaseous byproducts of pyrolysis.

Even so, business considerations can make technical issues seem like the least of the problems.

“Polymer technical development needs significant new investments to foster innovation,” Gotro told TechNewsWorld. “Existing polymer companies need a well-defined innovation strategy with the right balance of short-term versus long-term product development projects.”

Exhibit A: Plastic Logic

Plastic Logic, headquartered in the Mountain View, Calif. (with R&D in the UK and manufacturing in Germany), is a spin-off from Cambridge University’s Cavendish Laboratory. The company was founded to make thin film transistors, but moved into manufacturing organic thin film transistors (OTFTs) for various applications.

Plastic Logic utilizes the simplest invention in plastic electronics — a single transistor that switches a particular pixel on or off. The real potential in this technology is in creating plastic integrated circuits capable of complex functions.

In recent years, Plastic Logic focused on backplanes for flexible e-reader displays, particularly backplanes for electronic paper — a display technology designed to mimic the appearance of ordinary ink on paper.

While e-paper is typically thin and flexible, a rigid display results when it is combined with a glass-based amorphous silicon backplane. Plastic Logic developed a flexible backplane technology, thus enabling the display, and therefore the reader device, to become flexible, thin, light and robust so it feels more like a sheet of paper.

Plastic Logic’s Que proReader was to be the first digital reading device made out of plastic electronics and designed specifically for professional use. The company raised more than $200 million and used much of that to build a plastic electronics factory.

However, in August 2010, Plastic Logic canceled its Que electronic book reader due to an inability to get manufacturing off the ground. In addition, a price war was occurring in the electronic books market.

On Jan. 18, the state-owned Russian Corporation of Nanotechnologies (Rusnano) announced a $700 million investment in Plastic Logic.

“Flexible plastic electronic displays will provide another major milestone in how people process information,” said Georgy Kolpachev, Rusnano’s managing director. “Entering this new disruptive segment at the stage of its inception gives Russia a chance to win a leading position in the global market of future electronics.”

Elements of the Plastic Logic saga fit into a larger trend described by Debbie Hauser, principal of California-based Best Impressions, a veteran sales and marketing management services firm supporting the plastics industry.

“Because high-tech devices are no longer manufactured for the most part in the U.S., this entire business sector has disappeared from the U.S. economy,” Hauser told TechNewsWorld. “This has put many molders out of business and affects the entire supply chain. For instance, the material suppliers are no longer building new plants in the U.S. — they are now being built in China, India, etc. So many jobs are gone and will not return.”

High-Tech Polymers

The arrival of conductive polymers on the high-tech scene has been a long time coming.

Naturally occurring “biopolymers” include wood, animal and vegetable fibers, bone, horn, starches, cellulose, latex, even the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) inside cell nuclei and the membrane that separates one cell from another in all living things, as well as messenger RNA which makes possible proteins, peptides and enzymes.

Then there’s the family of artificially manufactured industrial, synthetic polymers, the main man-made component in many common plastic materials. Produced commercially on a very large scale and having a wide range of properties and uses, synthetic polymers are formed by chemical reactions in which large numbers of monomer molecules are joined sequentially, forming a chain. Plastics and other synthetic polymers play an essential role in virtually every product.

The first electrically conducting polymers were discovered in 1977 by Hideki Shirakawa, Alan MacDiarmid and Alan Heeger. These scientists demonstrated that polyacetylene was electrically conductive and that by doping it with iodine vapor, they could enhance its conductivity by eight orders of magnitude, taking its conductance close to that of a metal. Today, polyacetylene is used, among numerous other applications, in the foil packaging for computer components to dissipate static.

That simple discovery kick-started research into a whole new technology based on conducting and semiconducting plastics. The maturation of the field of conducting polymers was confirmed by the awarding of the 2000 Nobel Prize in Chemistry to Shirakawa, MacDiarmid and Heeger “for the discovery and development of conductive polymers.”

By the late 1980s a number of other polymers had been shown to exhibit a piezoelectric effect or were demonstrated to be conductive. The poly-march was on.

Pockets of Polytech

The U.S. has a number of polymer business clusters connected with major universities.

  • Ohio: The original “Polymer Valley,” the main U.S. center of polymer research and production, is a five-county region in Northeast Ohio concentrated around Akron (the “Rubber Capital of the World” and home to the world’s four major tire makers — Goodrich, Goodyear, Firestone and General Tire). The area holds 45 percent of the state’s polymer industries, with more than 400 companies in the region manufacturing polymer-based materials. The University of Akron supports the industry with both the world’s first College of Polymer Science and Polymer Engineering and a specialized laboratory and research facility, the Goodyear Polymer Center.

    Dr. Stephen Cheng, dean of the College of Polymer Science & Polymer Engineering at the University of Akron, was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 2008 for the development of materials for liquid crystal displays and the elucidation of structure-property relationships in polymeric materials.

    “The most important issue or challenge here is to develop a new generation of manufacturing fabrications for polymers in high-technology applications,” Cheng told TechNewsWorld. “Bench research and test tube inventions alone will not generate a substantial impact on our economics.”

  • Gulf Coast: More than half of all polymer products made in the U.S. are produced in the Gulf Coast in Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi along the southern part of I-59. Boeing and Lockheed Martin at Stennis Space Center are just two of the many companies located along the I-59 technology corridor. U.S. News and World Report recently recognized the University of Southern Mississippi’s School for Polymers and High Performance Materials as one of the nation’s top 10 polymer science programs.
  • North Carolina: North Carolina is the seventh largest plastics manufacturing state in the nation. There are plastics companies in all areas of the state, with more than 200 plastics manufacturing companies in the Charlotte region. This area accounts for 30 percent of the state’s plastic employment in manufacturing and distribution, as well as more than 37 percent of plastics companies in the state. The Polymers Center of Excellence (PCE), located in Charlotte’s University Research Park, is a not-for-profit organization that operates out of its own facility in and works globally to provide a full array of services to the plastics industry, including training, product development, materials sciences, testing and injection molding.
  • Massachusetts: North Central Massachusetts features the largest plastics industry cluster in the northeast U.S., and the University of Massachusetts in Amherst was ranked in 2007 by U.S. News & World Report as having the nation’s #1 Polymer Science and Engineering Department.
  • California:The University of California Santa Barbara’s Center for Polymers and Organic Solids (CPOS) is an interdisciplinary effort that merges efforts in physics, chemistry, polymer science and biology. It draws upon expertise from these fields to conduct fundamental research on conjugated organic polymers with delocalized electronic conductivity, anisotropic linear and nonlinear optical properties, and novel electrochemical properties. Researchers at CPOS are currently finding ways to reduce the cost of solar cells. Their goal: to make photovoltaics at least as cheap as the grid. Alan Heeger, a CPOS professor of physics and materials engineering, won the 2000 Nobel Prize in chemistry with two other scientists for the discovery and development of electrically conducting polymers.

    The Center on Polymer Interfaces and Macromolecular Assemblies (CPIMA) is National Science Foundation sponsored partnership among Stanford University, IBM Almaden Research Center, the University of California Davis and the University of California Berkeley.

    A diverse group of investigators are involved in research in polymer and materials chemistry and nanoscience in the department of chemistry in the School of Physical Sciences at the University of California Irvine.

Fantastic Plastic, Part 2: Electric Action

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