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Home NEWS Science News Technology

Professor Tae-Woo Lee’s Team Creates All-in-One Organic Transistor Integrating Processing, Memory, and Light Emission

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
June 8, 2026
in Technology
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Professor Tae-Woo Lee’s Team Creates All-in-One Organic Transistor Integrating Processing, Memory, and Light Emission — Technology and Engineering
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In a groundbreaking development poised to reshape the future of wearable electronics, researchers at Seoul National University (SNU) have unveiled an ultra-low-voltage electrochemical organic light-emitting transistor that seamlessly integrates signal processing, memory functions, and light emission into a single semiconductor device. This innovative transistor leverages a novel ion transport enhancer embedded within a light-emitting polymer semiconductor channel, an advancement that facilitates the formation of an electric double layer at the drain electrode interface. This mechanism enables efficient electron injection at strikingly low voltages—well below the thresholds conventionally deemed necessary—thereby overcoming longstanding limitations inherent in prior materials and device architectures.

Wearable technologies have rapidly evolved to encompass not just sensing capabilities but also complex real-time processing and visualization functionalities. Nevertheless, these capabilities have traditionally necessitated complex assemblies of discrete components, complicating device fabrication and limiting flexibility, miniaturization, and energy efficiency. By contrast, the SNU team’s device condenses these multifaceted functions into a minimalist single-active-layer structure, heralding a new paradigm for wearable devices that are simultaneously smarter, simpler, and more energy-conscious.

Organic light-emitting transistors (OLETs) have been a subject of intense research due to their capacity to unify the operations of transistors and light-emitting diodes within one platform. Despite their promise, conventional OLETs suffer from prohibitive operating voltages in the range of 80 to 180 volts caused by extensive lateral electrode spacing and substantial injection barriers for electrons. Attempts to mitigate this through electrochemical ion doping still demand voltages exceeding 3.5 volts and result in narrow, unstable emission zones, severely restricting practical applications in dynamic, flexible displays and wearable electronics.

Addressing these significant challenges, the research team devised a transistor architecture where the ion transport enhancer catalyzes spontaneous migration of cations, which form a stable electric double layer directly at the drain electrode. This ion-induced electric double layer acts as a robust conduit for electron injection without requiring high external voltages or the unstable n-type doping that previously plagued these devices. The result is a remarkably efficient light emission observable at voltages under 3.5 V, with the additional advantage of spatially widespread and stable recombination zones where electrons and holes meet and radiate photons.

Beyond mere light emission, the new transistor exhibits intrinsic neuromorphic properties: it can process signals and retain memory by accumulating responses under sequential stimuli and maintaining outputs over time. This capacity effectively mimics synaptic behaviors essential for next-generation artificial intelligence and adaptive electronics embedded directly in wearable platforms. The practical implications were showcased in a flexible display system powered by just two 1.5 V batteries, underscoring potential for low-power wearable applications including real-time bio-feedback and health monitoring.

This singular integration of light emission, memory, and signal processing challenges the prevailing architecture of wearable systems, which rely heavily on the cumbersome integration of separate sensing, computational, memory, and display elements. By drastically simplifying the device stack and embedding multifunctionality within one active layer, the approach reduces potential failure points, enhances mechanical flexibility, and slashes fabrication complexity and cost.

Crucially, the broader impact of this device lies in its promise to enable on-skin and implantable electronics capable of immediate, intuitive interaction. Conventional wearable devices struggle to provide users with real-time feedback during movement due to their discrete and rigid assemblies. The SNU-developed transistor can serve as a platform for intelligent artificial skin by delivering instant visual cues through light emission combined with adaptive data processing, fostering new possibilities in rehabilitation, emergency medical diagnostics, fitness tracking, and continuous healthcare monitoring.

Professor Tae-Woo Lee, who spearheaded this pioneering work, highlights that this device exemplifies how diverse functionalities can coexist within a single semiconductor architecture—eliminating the need for cumbersome fabrication steps that join processing, memory, and display units separately. This streamlined integration is vital for next-generation wearable technologies that demand lightweight, flexible, real-time interactive platforms.

Technically, the device operates through a finely balanced interplay of electronic and ionic conduction within the polymer semiconductor. The incorporation of ion transport enhancers promotes the migration of cations at the drain, resulting in an induced electric double layer that dramatically enhances electron injection. This mechanism not only reduces the required operational voltage but stabilizes the emission zone laterally across the device, a significant advancement over previous devices with restricted emission areas.

The researchers demonstrated that this architecture simultaneously supports transistor operation—modulating hole channels in the polymer semiconductor—and electrochemical light emission through the recombination of electrons and holes near the drain. This dual-functionality within a singular active layer device represents a fundamental step forward in organic electronics and optoelectronics, deftly circumventing trade-offs typically encountered between electrical performance and electroluminescent efficiency.

Additionally, the device displays hallmark features of neuromorphic systems, including cumulative response to repeated electrical stimuli and retention of these responses, akin to memory processes observed in biological synapses. These capabilities point to a future where wearable devices not only gather and display data but also adapt and learn from user interactions autonomously, opening doors to self-regulating therapeutic and diagnostic technologies.

Seoul National University’s commitment to advancing engineering and technology is exemplified in this achievement, which aligns with the institution’s vision to nurture leaders capable of pioneering global industry and technological innovation. By publishing in the prestigious journal Nature Materials, Professor Lee and his team contribute decisively to the global conversation on next-generation flexible electronics and wearable semiconductors.

Looking ahead, the research group envisions evolving this transistor technology into comprehensive on-skin semiconductor platforms. Such platforms could underpin intelligent artificial skins that meld sensing, computation, memory, and user feedback within a single ultra-thin device, enabling seamless human-machine interfaces that dramatically enhance personal health management and interactive technologies.

This landmark study thus charts a compelling new course for electronic devices, demonstrating that low-voltage multifunctional organic semiconductors can bridge current gaps between device simplicity, operational efficiency, and intelligent functionality. By doing so, it lays critical groundwork for a future where wearable electronics are not only more integrated and compact but also dynamically interactive and energy efficient.

Subject of Research: Not applicable
Article Title: Ultralow-voltage electrochemical organic light-emitting transistors with pinned and wide lateral recombination
News Publication Date: 8-Jun-2026
Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41563-026-02613-7
Image Credits: © Nature Materials, originally published in Nature Materials

Keywords

Organic light-emitting transistor, ultra-low voltage, electric double layer, ion transport enhancer, neuromorphic electronics, wearable devices, on-skin electronics, organic semiconductor, signal processing, memory integration, electroluminescence, flexible displays

Tags: electric double layer transistorelectrochemical polymer semiconductorelectron injection at low voltageenergy-efficient wearable technologyintegrated processing memory light emissionion transport enhancer in semiconductorsmultifunctional organic transistororganic light-emitting transistorSeoul National University organic electronicssingle-layer organic semiconductor deviceultra-low-voltage organic transistorwearable electronics innovation

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