Organic Semiconductor
Organic Semiconductor
Organic)
Outline
Why semiconductors? Inorganic Vs. Organic Semiconductors Why organics? Why not Organics? Organic Electronics: Organic Semiconductors Applications: OLEDs Solar Cell Future of Organic Electronics
Introduction
Electronic Materials
Resistivity Chart
Types of Semiconductors
Semiconductor
Inorganic
organic
Polymer based organic material (which are carbon based). Vander Waals bonded crystals.
Cont.
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
Like other industries, inorganic semiconductor technology feels the pressures of cost and performance.
Why Organic?
Advantages
Organic electronics are lighter, more flexible. Materials can be chemically tuned so that they can be tailored to the need. Low-Cost Electronics
No vacuum processing No lithography (printing) Low-cost substrates (plastic, paper, even cloth) Direct integration on package (lower insertion costs)
Why Organic?
Comparison Example
Organic Electronic
Cost $5 / ft2 Low Capital
Silicon
$100 / ft2 $1-$10 billion
Fabrication Cost
Device Size Material Required Conditions Process
10 ft x Roll to Roll
Flexible Plastic Substrate Ambient Processing Continuous Direct Printing
< 1m2
Rigid Glass or Metal Ultra Cleanroom Multi-step Photolithography
Contd.
They are also biodegradable (being made from carbon).
This opens the door to many exciting and advanced new applications that would be impossible using copper or silicon.
Conductive polymers have high resistance and therefore are not good conductors of electricity. Because of poor electronic behavior (lower mobility), they have much smaller bandwidths. Shorter lifetimes and are much more dependant on stable environment conditions than inorganic electronics would be.
Organic Electronics
Organic semiconductors combines the advantages of both polymers and semiconductors
POLYMERS Light weight Simple Processing Flexibility SEMICONDUCTORS Tunability Opto-electronics
Organic Semiconductors
Organic Semiconductors
1990s: Friend group (Cambridge University) published the first results on polymer light emitting diodes.
2000: Noble prize in chemistry for the discovering and development of conductive polymers (Heeger, Mac Diarmid and Shirakawa). 2000s: Organic solar cells with efficiencies of >5% were realized.
Application Areas
OLEDs
Basics of OLED
Steps:
(1) Charge injection
(2) Charge transport (3) Exciton formation (4) Light emission
Contd.
(i) Green - Alq3 (tris (8-hdroxy-quinolinato)-aluminium) and Alq3 doped by N,Ndiphenyl-quinacridone (QAD) (ii) Red or red-orange Alq3 doped by PtOEP-(2,3,7,8,12,13,17,18- Octaethyl 21H, 23H-porphine platinum (II)) (iii) Blue Spiro-ANTH - Spiro-Anthracene.