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Organic Semiconductor and its applications Sara Saedinia University of California, Irvine Today we will talk about Organic materials Advantages Disadvantages Applications Future of organic semiconductor Organic Semiconductor (elect.) vs. Inorganic Silicon based inorganic material Covalently bonded crystals Polymer based organic material Van der Waals bonded crystals Why Organic? Advantages Organic electronics are lighter, more flexible 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 Silicon Cost $5 / ft2 $100 / ft2 Fabrication Cost Low Capital $1-$10 billion Device Size 10 ft x Roll to Roll < 1m2 Material Flexible Plastic Substrate Rigid Glass or Metal Required Conditions Ambient Processing Ultra Cleanroom Process Continuous Direct Printing Multi-step Photolithography Why Organic? Advantages 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. Why not Organic? Disadvantages 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. Applications Displays: RFID : (OLED) Organic Light Emitting Diodes Organic Nano-Radio Frequency Identification Devices Solar cells Displays (OLED) One of the biggest applications of organic transistors right now. Organic TFTs may be used to drive LCDs and potentially even OLEDs, allowing integration of entire displays on plastic. Brighter displays Thinner displays More flexible RFID Passive RF Devices that talk to the outside world … so there will be no need for scanners. RFID benefits Quicker Checkout Improved Inventory Control Reduced Waste Efficient flow of goods from manufacturer to consumer Solar Cells The light falls on the polymer Electron/hole is generated The electron is captured C60 The electricity is passed by the nanotube Future of Organic Semiconductor Smart Textiles Lab on a chip Portable compact screens Skin Cancer treatment Thank You Questions? References http://www.idtechex.com/printedelectronicsworld/articles/flexible_organic_13_56_mhz_rfid_tag_is_a_cost_breakthrough_000 00613.asp http://autoid.mit.edu/cs/ http://www.physorg.com/news2339.html http://engineeringtv.com/blogs/etv/archive/2008/03/26/organic-solar-cells.aspx http://engineeringtv.com/blogs/etv/archive/2008/03/26/organic-solar-cells.aspx http://spie.org/x19641.xml?ArticleID=x19641 http://www.orgatronics.com/smart_fabrics.html http://www.laserfocusworld.com/display_article/283860/12/none/none/News/MEDICAL-PHOTONICS:-OLEDs-enhance-PDTfor-skin-cancer http://www.sematech.org/meetings/archives/other/20021028/14_Subramanian_Organic.pdf www.eng.buffalo.edu/Courses/ee240/studentprojects/spr2006/group5.ppt http://www.mpip-mainz.mpg.de/documents/aksp/Seminare/Old_Basisseminars/W2007/Basisseminars/electronics.pdf