Review

Nature 428, 911-918 (29 April 2004) | doi:10.1038/nature02498

The path to ubiquitous and low-cost organic electronic appliances on plastic

Stephen R. Forrest

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Organic electronics are beginning to make significant inroads into the commercial world, and if the field continues to progress at its current, rapid pace, electronics based on organic thin-film materials will soon become a mainstay of our technological existence. Already products based on active thin-film organic devices are in the market place, most notably the displays of several mobile electronic appliances. Yet the future holds even greater promise for this technology, with an entirely new generation of ultralow-cost, lightweight and even flexible electronic devices in the offing, which will perform functions traditionally accomplished using much more expensive components based on conventional semiconductor materials such as silicon.

  1. Princeton Institute for the Science and Technology of Materials (PRISM), Department of Electrical Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA

Correspondence to: Stephen R. Forrest Email: forrest@princeton.edu

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