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Polymerelectronics |
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Semiconducting Polymers for Electronics ApplicationsThe research group of Prof. Dr.
Ullrich Scherf aims to develop and
optimize synthetic procedures towards organic semiconductor materials.
Main focus is the design of
tailor-made materials of high purity and with optimum electronic
properties. The
materials are made for various application fields including organic
light
emitting diodes (OLED), organic solid-state polymer lasers, organic
photovoltaics, and
polymer electronics (polymer transistors). ![]() In the step from pure polymer
synthesis to research activities which
are focussed
on an active function of the materials, from structure oriented polymer
chemistry to the solid state properties of molecular ensembles, the
problem of
structural regularity and purity of the materials comes into the focus.
Many
important properties of such materials as thermal stability, photo- and
electroluminescence, electrical and photoconductivity etc are
dramatically influenced by structural defects and impurities, the
resulting
properties are often dominated by defects and traps. Reliable
structure-property relations
are coupled to the availability of structurally defined materials with
a reproducible profile of electronic properties. Furthermore, such
structure-property relation can form the base for a synthetic tailoring
of polymeric materials with optimum materials properties. ![]() Conjugated ladder polymers of the
poly(para-phenylene)-type
(LPPP) represent one of the most intensively investigated classes of
organic semiconducting polymers. Such LPPP materials have been first
prepared in 1991 (Scherf et al., 1991). Until now more then 200
scientific
papers describing synthesis, physical properties and applications in
photonics
and electronics have been published. ![]() Nanostructured polymer materials are increasingly attractive as active component of electronic devices especially for photovoltaic applications (photodiodes, solar cells). Hereby, novel strategies to design such nanoscale materials are of growing importance. The variety of methods includes nanoimprinting techniques, self assembly processes, the use of semiconducting polymer nanoparticles (Landfester et al., 2002), and the synthesis and processing of novel semiconducting block copolymers into nanostructured materials with defined dimensions of phase separation (Asawapirom et al., 2004). Two examples of such approaches are depicted in the Figures 4 and 5.
The availability of heterophase materials with a very large internal interface is seen as one key for an improvement of the power efficiency of organic solar cells. Hereby, so-called bulk heterojunction materials with a scale length of nanostructure formation near the diffusion length of free charge carriers in organic materials below 20 nm seem to be of outstanding importance. Literature Asawapirom, U.; F. Bulut, T. Farrell, C. Gadermaier, S. Gamerith, R. Güntner, T. Kietzke, S. Patil, T. Piok, R. Montenegro, B. Stiller, B. Tiersch, K. Landfester, E. J. W. List, D. Neher, C. Sotomayor Torres und U. Scherf. 2004. Materials for Polymer Electronics Applications – Semiconducting Polymer Thin Films and Nanoparticles. Macromolecular Symposium 212:83. Burroughes, J. H., D. D. C. Bradley, A. R. Brown, R. N. Marks, K. Mackey, R. H. Friend, P. L. Burn und A. B. Holmes. 1990. Light-emitting diodes based on conjugated polymers. Nature 347: 539. Hide, F., M. A. Diaz-Garcia, B. J. Schwarz, M. R. Andersson, Q. Pei und A. J. Heeger. 1996. Semiconducting polymers: A new class of solid-state laser materials.Science 273: 1833. Kallinger, C. M., M. Hilmer, A. Haugeneder, M. Perner, W. Spirkl, U. Lemmer, J. Feldmann, U. Scherf, K. Müllen, A. Gombert und V. Wittwer. 1998. A flexible conjugated polymer laser. Advanced Materials Landfester, K.; R. Montenegro, U. Scherf, R. Güntner, U. Asawapirom, S. Patil, D. Neher und T. Kietzke. Semiconducting Polymer Nanospheres in Aqueous Dispersion Prepared by Miniemulsion Process. Advanced Matererials 14 :651. Scherf, U. und K. Müllen. 1991. A soluble ladder polymer via bridging of functionalized poly(p-phenylene)-precursors. Die Makromolekulare Chemie, Rapid Communications 12: 489. Stehr, J., J. Crewett, F. Schindler, R. Sperling, G. von Plessen, U. Lemmer, J. M. Lupton, T. A. Klar, J. Feldmann, A. W. Holleitner, M. Forster und U. Scherf. 2003 . A low threshold polymer laser based on metallic nanoparticle gratings. Advanced Materials 15:1726. Tasch, S., A. Niko, G. Leising und U. Scherf. 1996. Highly efficient electroluminescence of new wide band gap ladder-type poly(para-phenylenes). Applied Physics Letters 68:1090. |