Abstract

Despite their high optical transparency and electrical conductivity, the commercialization of silver nanowire materials as transparent electrodes is challenging owing to the lack of a scalable micropatterning process. This paper proposes a versatile method for photopatterning silver nanowire networks, based on photoinduced nanowire–nanowire and nanowire–substrate cross-linking. Because the proposed method requires only a small loading of the photocross-linking agent, the intrinsic physical characteristics of the silver nanowire network can be preserved. Furthermore, through the roughness-assisted wetting phenomenon, the resulting patterns can be selectively hybridized to form bilayered nanowire/conducting polymer electrodes. The resulting hybrid transparent electrodes exhibit a low roughness, excellent tolerance to oxidation or electrochemical processes, and mechanical stability against bending without compromising the excellent optical/electrical characteristics achievable from the pristine silver nanowire network. These benefits are integrated to assemble an active-matrix-driven electrochromic display. The proposed method can thus facilitate the practical application of silver nanowire network based transparent electrodes.

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