题 目:Rapid and non-destructive optical patterning of conjugated polymers for device applications报告人:Adam Moule单 位:University of California, Davis
时 间:2019-10-21
地 点:南京瑞斯丽酒店
扫码观看精彩报告视频
报告摘要
A significant obstacle
for the industrial development of organic electronic devices is the lack of a
patterning technology having the disruptive power that photolithography exerted
in traditional microelectronics. Here we present a new scalable patterning
technology for organic semiconductors that takes advantage of the existing
photolithography infrastructure and is compatible with digital direct-write
patterning and sequential roll-to-roll (R2R) solution coating. The Moule group
works on a series of solubility control techniques including the use of marginal
solvents and polymer doping, that reduce the solubility of polymers at room
temperature, but allow patterning at elevated temperatures. Using these
techniques, we are able to vertically stack and laterally pattern mutually
soluble polymer layers, which are vital processing steps needed to expand the
use of organic semiconductors in device applications. Optimization of these
techniques has yielded diffraction limited film patterning with regular features
of 200-300 nm with only solution processing steps and direct write laser
patterning. We have also recently shown that vertically patterned layers are
stable, even with solvent exposure times of hours. This presentation will cover
the fundamentals of optical patterning of organic semiconductors and delve into
details of how to create doped microdomains, dopant diffusion, and the
relationship between polymer crystallinity, dopant diffusion rate, and pattern
fidelity.
个人简介
Adam Moule received
a Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry from the University of California, Berkeley in
2003, studying under Alex Pines. From 2004-2005 he was an Alexander von Humboldt
postdoctoral scholar at the University of Cologne studying under Klaus Meerholz.
Adam was an assistant professor of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science
from 2007-2012 at the University of California, Davis and became a full
professor of Chemical Engineering in 2019. In 2016, he won an Alexander von
Humboldt sabbatical award to study at the Max Planck Institute for polymer
theory. In 2017 Adam was chosen as a UC Davis chancellor’s scholar for research
excellence. In 2018 he became the Joe and Essie Smith endowed chair of chemical
engineering at UC Davis.
前往“发现”-“看一看”浏览“朋友在看”