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Page 1: Permeation in Flexible Electronics

Water Vapor and Oxygen Permeation in Flexible Electronics

Relevance, Test Methods

& the Future

Copyright © 2014 MOCON Inc.

Created by: Michelle Stevens for MOCON Inc.

Page 2: Permeation in Flexible Electronics

Mass transfer review

Application of mass transfer concepts to permeation measurement

Oxygen Transmission Rate Measurement (OTR) – ultra barrier

Water Vapor Transmission Rate Measurement (WVTR) – for Ultra Barriers

Page 3: Permeation in Flexible Electronics

Mass Transfer Review

Permeation: The flux of molecules through a material normalized to the partial pressure gradient (driving force) and material thickness

Transmission rate: The flux of molecules through a material.

Partial Pressure Gradient: Driving force

Diffusion: Process by which matter is transported from one part of a system to another as a result random molecular motions.

Page 4: Permeation in Flexible Electronics

xCDF

F is the permeation flux through a membrane of thickness

C is the concentration of permeant in the membrane at position x

D is the diffusion coefficient

Diffusion follows , it

by factors such as:

The surface area available

The distance the gas molecules must diffuse across

The concentration gradient

Gases must first dissolve in a fluid in order to diffuse across a membrane therefore

all gas exchange systems require a moist environment

Page 5: Permeation in Flexible Electronics

xCDF

0 l x

z

y

1) Area is infinite with respect

to thickness transfer in the

x-direction only

2) Constant temperature

Page 6: Permeation in Flexible Electronics

Initial and Boundary Conditions

c=0 x=0 t<0

c=0 x=l t

c=ci x=0 t

c=ci(l-x)/l 0<x<l t

0 l x

z

y

Page 7: Permeation in Flexible Electronics

c=ci x=0 t

0 l x

z

y

c=ci

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c=0 x=l t≥0

0 l x

z

y

c=0

ci

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Constant test gas

concentration

Constant sweep across film to

maintain concentration at 0

Page 10: Permeation in Flexible Electronics

NORM

ALI

ZED F

LUX ΔF/Δ

F∞

1/X2 = (4D/t2) - t

Pasternak, et. al, 1970

F =Dci

l+D c f - ci( )

l1+ 2 -1( )

nexp -

n2p 2Dt2

ìíî

üýþ

¥

åé

ëê

ù

ûú

Page 11: Permeation in Flexible Electronics

Area is infinite with respect to thickness – transfer in the x-direction only

Constant temperature

Constant test gas concentration

Constant sweep across film to maintain concentration at 0

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Leaks

Measure only what you intend to measure

Ambient air (72.6 F, 70% RH)

17930 ppm H2O

over 100 g/m2 day

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TruSeal®

ELIMINATE

Leaks

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Calibration Most sensors are comparative or concentration-based and require

calibration. It is important that sensors be calibrated in the range which they are

used. 10 ppm +/- 10% WVTR = 0.1 g/(m2day)

WVTR = 1 x 10-6 g/(m2day) 0.1 ppb water vapor

Factors that play a role in typical permeation such as temperature, flow

control and repeatability, are only compounded by calibration.

(Lowest NIST traceable calibration gas)

ELIMINATE Calibration

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0.1 ppb

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Absolute Sensors

Absolute or Intrinsic measurement

Theoretical sensitivity is 2 X 10-6 g/(m2 day) Coulometric Technology not affected by Temperature, Pressure, Flow

or Vibration.

No Calibration Required!

Page 17: Permeation in Flexible Electronics

1. Area is infinite with respect to thickness – transfer in the x-direction only

2. Constant temperature

3. Constant test gas concentration

4. Constant sweep across film to maintain concentration at 0

5. Eliminate leaks

6. Eliminate calibration

Page 18: Permeation in Flexible Electronics

OTR Data

Page 19: Permeation in Flexible Electronics

OTR Data

0

0.002

0.004

0.006

0.008

0 50 100 150 200 250

OTR

(cc

/(m

2 d

ay))

Time (hours)

MOCON OX-TRAN® Model 2/21 10x

OX-TRAN L sensitivity

OX-TRAN 10x data

OX-TRAN 10x sensitivity

Page 20: Permeation in Flexible Electronics

WVTR Data

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0 100 200 300

WVTR

(m

g/(

m2day))

Time (hours)

AQUATRAN

AQUATRAN Model 2

AQUATRAN 1 SENSITVITY

AQUATRAN MODEL 2

SENSITIVITY

Page 21: Permeation in Flexible Electronics

Summary By going back to the basics and relying on 50+ years of permeation

experience, we were able to ‘build a better wheel’ Area is infinite with respect to thickness – transfer in the x-direction only Constant temperature Constant test gas concentration Constant sweep across film to maintain concentration at 0 Eliminate leaks Eliminate calibration

Capable of measuring: OTR at 0.0005 cc/(m2day) WVTR at 0.00005 g/(m2day)

BASED ON THE FUNDAMENTALS OF PERMEATION

Page 22: Permeation in Flexible Electronics

References

Pasternak, R.A., Schimscheimer, J.F., and Heller, J. (1970). “A Dynamic Approach to Diffusion and Permeation Measurements.” Journal of Polymer Science Part A-2, 8.3 (1970): 467-479. Print.

Crank, J. The Mathematics of Diffusion. Oxford,: Clarendon, 1975. Print.