Single‐crystal, 1D nanostructures are well known for their high mobility electronic transport properties. Oxide‐nanowire field‐effect transistors (FETs) offer both high optical transparency and large mechanical conformability which are essential for flexible and transparent display applications. Whereas the “on‐currents” achieved with nanowire channel transistors are already sufficient to drive active matrix organic light emitting diode (AMOLED) displays; it is shown here that incorporation of electrochemical‐gating (EG) to nanowire electronics reduces the operation voltage to ≤2 V. This opens up new possibilities of realizing flexible, portable, transparent displays that are powered by thin film batteries. A composite solid polymer electrolyte (CSPE) is used to obtain all‐solid‐state FETs with outstanding performance; the field‐effect mobility, on/off current ratio, transconductance, and subthreshold slope of a typical ZnO single‐nanowire transistor are 62 cm2/Vs, 107, 155 μS/μm and 115 mV/dec, respectively. Practical use of such electrochemically‐gated field‐effect transistor (EG FET) devices is supported by their long‐term stability in air. Moreover, due to the good conductivity (≈10−2 S/cm) of the CSPE, sufficiently high switching speed of such EG FETs is attainable; a cut‐off frequency in excess of 100 kHz is measured for in‐plane FETs with large gate‐channel distance of >10 μm. Consequently, operation speeds above MHz can be envisaged for top‐gate transistor geometries with insulator thicknesses of a few hundreds of nanometers. The solid polymer electrolyte developed in this study has great potential in future device fabrication using all‐solution processed and high throughput techniques.
Hair cells are specialized mechanosensitive cells responsible for mediating balance and hearing within the inner ear. In mammals, hair cells are limited in number and do not regenerate. Human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) provide a valuable source for deriving human hair cells to study their development and design therapies to treat and/or prevent their degeneration. In this study we used a dynamic 3D Rotary Cell Culture System (RCCS) for deriving inner ear organoids from hPSCs. We show RCCS-derived organoids recapitulate stages of inner ear development and give rise to an enriched population of hair cells displaying vestibular-like morphological and physiological phenotypes, which resemble developing human fetal inner ear hair cells as well as the presence of accessory otoconia-like structures. These results show that hPSC-derived organoids can generate complex inner ear structural features and be a resource to study inner ear development.
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