Ambipolar Materials and Devices

Ambipolar Materials and Devices

Author: Ye Zhou

Publisher: Royal Society of Chemistry

Published: 2020-09-04

Total Pages: 463

ISBN-13: 1788019288

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Ambipolar materials represent a class of materials where positive and negative charge carriers can both transport concurrently. In recent years, a diverse range of materials have been synthesized and utilized for implementing ambipolar charge transport, with applications in high‐density data storage, field effect transistors, nanotransitors, photonic memory, biomaterial-based memories and artificial synapses. This book highlights recent development of ambipolar materials involving materials design, fundamental principles, interface modifications, device structures, ambipolar characteristics and promising applications. Challenges and prospects for investigating ambipolar materials in electronics and optoelectronics are also discussed. With contributions from global leaders in the field, this title will appeal to graduate students and researchers who want to understand the design, materials characteristics, device operation principles, specialized device application and mechanisms of the latest ambipolar materials.


Charge Transport in Liquid Crystalline Smectic and Discotic Organic Semiconductors

Charge Transport in Liquid Crystalline Smectic and Discotic Organic Semiconductors

Author: Sanjoy Paul

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 205

ISBN-13:

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Organic electronics offer the possibility of producing low cost, flexible, and large area electronics. Organic semiconductors (OSCs) (organic polymers and crystals), used in organic electronics, are promising materials for novel optical and electronic devices such as organic light emitting diodes, organic field effect transistors, organic sensors, and organic photovoltaics (OPVs). OSCs are composed of molecules weakly held together via van der Walls forces rather than covalent bonds as in the case of inorganic semiconductors such as Si. The combined effect of small wave function overlap, spatial and energetic disorder in organic semiconducting materials lead to localization of charge carriers and, in many cases, hopping conduction. OSCs also differ from conventional semiconductors in that charges photogeneration (e.g., in OPVs) proceeds via the production, diffusion, and dissociation of excitons. Liquid crystalline OSCs (LCOSCs) are semiconductors with phases intermediate between the highly ordered crystalline and completely disordered liquid phases. These materials offer many advantages including facile alignment and the opportunity to study the effects of differing intermolecular geometries on transfer integrals, disorder-induced trapping, charge mobilities, and photogeneration efficiency. In this dissertation work, we explored the photogeneration and charge transport mechanisms in a few model smectic and discotic LCs to better understand the governing principles of photogeneration and charge transport using conventional and novel methods based on the pulsed laser time-of-flight charge carrier transport technique. Four major interrelated topics were considered in this research. First, a sample of smectic LC was aligned in order to compare the resulting hole mobility to that of an unaligned sample, with the aim of understanding how the intermolecular alignment over large length scales affects the hopping probability. The role of the polarization of the photogenerating light was also explored in the context of these anisotropic systems. Next, the photogeneration and charge transport was investigated as a function of temperature, electric field, the wavelength and intensity of photogenerating light. Different exciton dissociation interfaces between the electrode and the LC to probe the details of the mechanism of excitonic dissociation (e.g., surface mediated generation vs. exciton-exciton fusion) were explored. Next, we have also developed a new method of spatially resolving the photogeneration and transport mechanisms in inhomogeneous OSCs called "scanning time of flight microscopy (STOFm)" which simultaneously obtains 2d images of transport coefficients and polarized transmittance. The STOFm was extensively used to study charge transport in various structured semiconductors: smectics, discotics, as well as in phase separated LC/polymer structures. Finally, this work involves characterization and analysis of transport in a number of new phenyl-naphthalene LC OSCs.


Large Area and Flexible Electronics

Large Area and Flexible Electronics

Author: Mario Caironi

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2015-01-13

Total Pages: 588

ISBN-13: 3527679995

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From materials to applications, this ready reference covers the entire value chain from fundamentals via processing right up to devices, presenting different approaches to large-area electronics, thus enabling readers to compare materials, properties and performance. Divided into two parts, the first focuses on the materials used for the electronic functionality, covering organic and inorganic semiconductors, including vacuum and solution-processed metal-oxide semiconductors, nanomembranes and nanocrystals, as well as conductors and insulators. The second part reviews the devices and applications of large-area electronics, including flexible and ultra-high-resolution displays, light-emitting transistors, organic and inorganic photovoltaics, large-area imagers and sensors, non-volatile memories and radio-frequency identification tags. With its academic and industrial viewpoints, this volume provides in-depth knowledge for experienced researchers while also serving as a first-stop resource for those entering the field.


Semiconducting Polymers

Semiconducting Polymers

Author: Georges Hadziioannou

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2006-12-15

Total Pages: 786

ISBN-13: 3527312714

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The field of semiconducting polymers has attracted many researchers from a diversity of disciplines. Printed circuitry, flexible electronics and displays are already migrating from laboratory successes to commercial applications, but even now fundamental knowledge is deficient concerning some of the basic phenomena that so markedly influence a device's usefulness and competitiveness. This two-volume handbook describes the various approaches to doped and undoped semiconducting polymers taken with the aim to provide vital understanding of how to control the properties of these fascinating organic materials. Prominent researchers from the fields of synthetic chemistry, physical chemistry, engineering, computational chemistry, theoretical physics, and applied physics cover all aspects from compounds to devices. Since the first edition was published in 2000, significant findings and successes have been achieved in the field, and especially handheld electronic gadgets have become billion-dollar markets that promise a fertile application ground for flexible, lighter and disposable alternatives to classic silicon circuitry. The second edition brings readers up-to-date on cutting edge research in this field.


Organic Thin Film Transistor Integration

Organic Thin Film Transistor Integration

Author: Flora Li

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2011-03-21

Total Pages: 258

ISBN-13: 3527634452

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Research on organic electronics (or plastic electronics) is driven by the need to create systems that are lightweight, unbreakable, and mechanically flexible. With the remarkable improvement in the performance of organic semiconductor materials during the past few decades, organic electronics appeal to innovative, practical, and broad-impact applications requiring large-area coverage, mechanical flexibility, low-temperature processing, and low cost. Thus, organic electronics appeal to a broad range of electronic devices and products including transistors, diodes, sensors, solar cells, lighting, displays, and electronic identification and tracking devices A number of commercial opportunities have been identified for organic thin film transistors (OTFTs), ranging from flexible displays, electronic paper, radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags, smart cards, to low-cost disposable electronic products, and more are continually being invented as the technology matures. The potential applications for "plastic electronics" are huge but several technological hurdles must be overcome. In many of these applications, transistor serves as a fundamental building block to implement the necessary electronic functionality. Hence, research in organic thin film transistors (OTFTs) or organic field effect transistors (OFETs) is eminently pertinent to the development and realization of organic electronics. This book presents a comprehensive investigation of the production and application of a variety of polymer based transistor devices and circuits. It begins with a detailed overview of Organic Thin Film Transistors (OTFTs) and discusses the various possible fabrication methods reported so far. This is followed by two major sections on the choice, optimization and implementation of the gate dielectric material to be used. Details of the effects of processing on the efficiency of the contacts are then provided. The book concludes with a chapter on the integration of such devices to produce a variety of OTFT based circuits and systems. The key objective is to examine strategies to exploit existing materials and techniques to advance OTFT technology in device performance, device manufacture, and device integration. Finally, the collective knowledge from these investigations facilitates the integration of OTFTs into organic circuits, which is expected to contribute to the development of new generation of all-organic displays for communication devices and other pertinent applications. Overall, a major outcome of this work is that it provides an economical means for organic transistor and circuit integration, by enabling the use of a well-established PECVD infrastructure, while not compromising the performance of electronics. The techniques established here are not limited to use in OTFTs only; the organic semiconductor and SiNx combination can be used in other device structures (e.g., sensors, diodes, photovoltaics). Furthermore, the approach and strategy used for interface optimization can be extended to the development of other materials systems.


Electronic Processes in Organic Semiconductors

Electronic Processes in Organic Semiconductors

Author: Anna Köhler

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2015-06-08

Total Pages: 436

ISBN-13: 3527332928

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The first advanced textbook to provide a useful introduction in a brief, coherent and comprehensive way, with a focus on the fundamentals. After having read this book, students will be prepared to understand any of the many multi-authored books available in this field that discuss a particular aspect in more detail, and should also benefit from any of the textbooks in photochemistry or spectroscopy that concentrate on a particular mechanism. Based on a successful and well-proven lecture course given by one of the authors for many years, the book is clearly structured into four sections: electronic structure of organic semiconductors, charged and excited states in organic semiconductors, electronic and optical properties of organic semiconductors, and fundamentals of organic semiconductor devices.


Semiconductors

Semiconductors

Author: Martin I. Pech-Canul

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2019-01-17

Total Pages: 590

ISBN-13: 3030021718

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This book is a practical guide to optical, optoelectronic, and semiconductor materials and provides an overview of the topic from its fundamentals to cutting-edge processing routes to groundbreaking technologies for the most recent applications. The book details the characterization and properties of these materials. Chemical methods of synthesis are emphasized by the authors throughout the publication. Describes new materials and updates to older materials that exhibit optical, optoelectronic and semiconductor behaviors; Covers the structural and mechanical aspects of the optical, optoelectronic and semiconductor materials for meeting mechanical property and safety requirements; Includes discussion of the environmental and sustainability issues regarding optical, optoelectronic, and semiconductor materials, from processing to recycling.


Organic Molecular Crystals

Organic Molecular Crystals

Author: E. Silin̦š

Publisher: American Institute of Physics

Published: 1994

Total Pages: 466

ISBN-13:

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Market: Specialists, researchers, and students in solid-state physics, materials science, electronics, chemical physics, organic and physical chemistry, and molecular biophysics. This monograph focuses on the interaction processes of excitons and charge carriers with the local environment, including the polarization and localization phenomena and the formation of polaronic quasi- particles. Transport phenomena are discussed and directly correlated with interaction dynamics, which actually determine the time- and temperature-dependent transiton of charge carriers and excitons from a coherent to a diffusive mode of motion.