This book focuses on the exciting topic on self-organized organic semiconductors – from materials to device applications. It offers up-to-date and accessible coverage of self-organized semiconductors for organic chemistry, polymer science, liquid crystals, materials science, material engineering, electrical engineering, chemical engineering, optics, optic-electronics, nanotechnology and semiconductors. Chapters cover chemistry, physics, processing, and characterization. The applications include photovoltaics, light-emitting diodes (LEDs), and transistors.
Inhoudsopgave
Preface.
Contributors.
1 Crystal Engineering Organic Semiconductors (Joseph C. Sumrak, Anatoliy N. Sokolov, and Leonard R. Mac Gillivray).
2 Conjugated Block Copolymers and Cooligomers (Yongye Liang and Luping Yu).
3 Charge Transports and Its Modeling in Liquid Crystals (Jun-ichi Hanna and Akira Ohno).
4 Self-Organized Discotic Liquid Crystals as Novel Organic Semiconductors (Manoj Mathew and Quan Li).
5 Self-Organized Semiconducting Smectic Liquid Crystals (Ji Ma and Quan Li).
6 Self-Assembling of Carbon Nanotubes (Liming Dai).
7 Self-Organized Fullerene Based Organic Semiconductors (Li-Mei Jin and Quan Li).
8 High-Efficiency Organic Solar Cells Using Self-Organized Materials (Paul A. Lane).
9 Selective Molecular Assembly for Bottom-Up Fabrication of Organic Thin-Film Transistors (Takeo Minari, Masataka Kano, and Kazuhito Tsukagoshi).
Index.
Over de auteur
Quan Li, Ph D, is Director of Organic Synthesis and Advanced Materials Laboratory at the Liquid Crystal Institute and Adjunct Professor in the Chemical Physics Interdisciplinary Program of Kent State University, where he has directed research projects supported by the National Science Foundation and other U.S. government agencies and several companies. He received his Ph D in organic chemistry from the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Shanghai, where he was promoted to a Full Professor of Organic Chemistry and Medicinal Chemistry in 1998.