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Scientists Develop the World’s First Transistor Made of Wood

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Modulation of electrical current in a wood-based electrochemical transistor.

A team of researchers from Linköping University and the KTH Royal Institute of Technology have created the world’s first transistor made from wood. Their findings, published in the journal PNAS, open up new opportunities for the advancement of wood-based electronics and the control of electronic plants.

Transistors, a revolutionary invention that dates back nearly a century, are often regarded as one of the most significant innovations in human history, on par with the telephone, the light bulb, and the bicycle. Today, they play a crucial role in modern electronic devices and are manufactured at a nanoscale level. A transistor acts as a control device, regulating the flow of current, and can also serve as a power switch.

Researchers at Linköping University, together with colleagues from the KTH Royal Institute of Technology, have now developed the world’s first electrical transistor made of wood.

“We’ve come up with an unprecedented principle. Yes, the wood transistor is slow and bulky, but it does work, and has huge development potential,” says Isak Engquist, senior associate professor at the Laboratory for Organic Electronics at Linköping University.

Isak Engquist

Isak Engquist, senior associate professor at the Laboratory for Organic Electronics at Linköping University. Credit: Thor Balkhed

 

In previous trials, transistors made of wood have been able to regulate ion transport only. And when the ions run out, the transistor stops functioning. The transistor developed by the Linköping researchers, however, can function continuously and regulate electricity flow without deteriorating.

The researchers used balsa wood to create their transistor, as the technology involved requires a grainless wood that is evenly structured throughout. They removed the lignin, leaving only long cellulose fibers with channels where the lignin had been.

These channels were then filled with a conductive plastic, or polymer, called PEDOT:PSS, resulting in an electrically conductive wood material.

Isak Engquist and Van Chinh Tran

Isak Engquist, senior associate professor, and Van Chinh Tran, a Ph.D. student at Linköping University. Credit: Thor Balkhed

 

The researchers used this to build the wood transistor and could show that it is able to regulate electric current and provide continuous function at a selected output level. It could also switch the power on and off, albeit with a certain delay – switching it off took about a second; on, about five seconds.

Possible applications could include regulating electronic plants, which is another strong research area at Linköping University. One advantage of the transistor channel being so large is that it could potentially tolerate a higher current than regular organic transistors, which could be important for certain future applications. But Isak Engquist wants to stress something:

“We didn’t create the wood transistor with any specific application in mind. We did it because we could. This is basic research, showing that it’s possible, and we hope it will inspire further research that can lead to applications in the future,” says Isak Engquist.

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