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		<title>IDTechEx | by technology | Printed Electronics | Printed Electronics World | Materials | Organics</title>
		<link>http://www.idtechex.com/research/topics/organics_000233.asp</link>
		<description>IDTechEx provides independent analysis on the development and application of RFID, smart packaging and printed electronics</description>
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		<copyright>Copyright (C) IDTechEx Ltd</copyright>
		<topicid>233</topicid>
		<topicurl>/research/topics/organics_000233.asp</topicurl>
<item><title>IDTechEx report on Intellipak conference held 5 November - Part two</title><description>IDTechEx finalises its report on the Intellipak conference held on 5 November in Sweden</description><link>http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/idtechex_report_on_intellipak_conference_held_5_november_part_two_00001123.asp?rsstopicid=233</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/idtechex_report_on_intellipak_conference_held_5_november_part_two_00001123.asp?rsstopicid=233</guid><pubDate>11 Nov 2008</pubDate></item>

<item><title>IDTechEx report on Intellipak conference held 5 November -  Part One</title><description>IDTechEx report on the Intellipak conference held in Sweden on 5 November that was mainly in Swedish and partly in English with just over 40 attending and excellent content.</description><link>http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/idtechex_report_on_intellipak_conference_held_5_november_part_one_00001122.asp?rsstopicid=233</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/idtechex_report_on_intellipak_conference_held_5_november_part_one_00001122.asp?rsstopicid=233</guid><pubDate>10 Nov 2008</pubDate></item>

<item><title>Chemist devises self assembling organic wires</title><description>A team of chemists at The Johns Hopkins University has created water-soluble electronic materials that spontaneously assemble themselves into &quot;wires&quot; 10,000 times smaller than a human hair.</description><link>http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/chemist_devises_self_assembling_organic_wires_00001109.asp?rsstopicid=233</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/chemist_devises_self_assembling_organic_wires_00001109.asp?rsstopicid=233</guid><pubDate>24 Oct 2008</pubDate></item>

<item><title>SID Organic Electronics UK 2008</title><description>IDTechEx technology analyst Dr Harry Zervos attended the meeting of the Society for Information Displays in London, where the latest research and development efforts were discussed and presented. 
Some of the presentations are described below:

In his plenary address, Dr Dago de Leeuw from Philips- TU Eindhoven spoke about &quot;Polymeric non-volatile memories&quot; 
Philips introduced the first ever 13.56 MHz first RFID system based on organic transponders (IEEE, J Sol. St. Circuits, 2007) and Poly-IC were the first to produce such RFID tags in a roll-2-roll process. The next step would be the ability to include programmable memory to store data, with requirements such as:
Resistive/rewritable
Reproducible
Reliable
Program cycle endurance
Retention
Fast switch times
-	Resistive switching
Switching observed on electron only PLED devices with aluminum electrodes, but with very low yield. Yet, yield improved with UV/O3 treatment. That's unexpected as the addition of a 50 nm alumina layer- an insulator (!)- increased yield. The forming of the memory was attributed to &quot;soft breakdown&quot; of Al2O3.  The type of polymer used was found to be irrelevant, as was the type of electrode and type of oxide irrelevant. In the process of the soft breakdown in the oxide, the polymer acts as nothing more than a current-limiting series resistance. 
Dr DE Leeuw finished his talk with the message to remember:

&quot;Let's store data by oxidizing the electrode before processing!&quot;





Prof Jenny Nelson of Imperial College London spoke on the &quot;Modeling of charge transport in disordered organic semiconductors&quot;.
Taking into account the fact that chemical structure, side chain length and processing/ macroscopic parameters (e.g. temperature, electric field) influence mobility, simulations showed that ordered/crystalline-regions increased with temperature. As the surface roughness affects simulated mobility, better behavior was observed when processing at higher temperatures. 
The strong influence of molecular packing was also highlighted but was found difficult to compute and verify.

In his talk on the charge balance in organic light emitting devices, professor Franky So of the University of Florida pointed out that charge balance is important to achieve high efficiency devices, whether small molecule or polymer. The bottleneck here is electron transport, the high triplet energy and high electron mobility needed while avoiding triplet exciton quenching to enhance efficiency. 

Prof Donal Bradley gave an overview on Molecular Electronic Materials and Devices.
He focused on the following points:
-	Electrode materials for cathodes: low work function suited to efficient injection. Encapsulation-permeability an issue for plastic substrates. 
-	Some of the oxides used as anodes can also be used as electron injection layers. Nanostructured TiO2 studied to this effect, du eto its use in DSSC solar cells. In order to change its performance a layer of MoO3 was inserted which unfortunately had a detrimental effect to the device. Replacing titania with zirconia achieved  a better performing device
-	Vapor Phase Polymerized PEDOT: VPP PEDOT: Good work function for hole injection, makes up for ITO's shortcoming in that respect.  Efforts are being made to optimize VPP PEDOT for OLEDs. Added PEDOT:PSS leads to enhanced hole injection and much improved efficiency. There are hopes to be able to use VPP PEDOT instead of ITO, when using an additional PEDOT PSS layer. 
A discrete component demonstrator of OLEDs and OPDs has also been fabricated. 

According to Dr Madec of the University of Manchester, who are looking into the possibility of inkjet printing of organic TFTs, small molecules are best for TFTs due to better packing. 
The group studied different formulations of TIPS pentacene; a soluble derivative of pentacene. The research proposes formulations of inks and use of different types of binders in order to achieve rheological properties that would be making the ink compatible with Inkjet printing and look into the links between morphology and mobility. 

There was also a presentation from Dr Xiaojun Guo from Plastic Logic on the deay of the oepnign ceremony of the company's  production facility in Dresden. 
PL has received over US$200 million in global investment and have now demonstrated an e-paper flexible display,10-14'' in size, 25-50g in weight with the overall product  weighing less than a  pound , thin  at a &amp;frac14; inch, robust, flexible and conformal with low power consumption. 
The company uses solution processable polymer semiconductors and dielectrics, compatible with low cost PET substrates with a scalable manufacturing route based on direct writing and laser patterning technologies. 
Active matrix driving scans each line quickly, approximately 20ms per frame. Passive matrix driving would take several minutes to update the display so each pixel uses a TFT for driving and a capacitor for data storage. 
Backplane requirements: 
-	TFT with low on resistance, low source/gate line resistance
-	TFT with high off resistance, 
-	high yield and uniform performance
-	stable performance for constant product use
The stability of the device was tested through electrical stressing. No change in device performance was recorded after 250 hours of electrical stress, (.8s ON, .8 s OFF, performance measured every 5.5 hours). 
</description><link>http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/sid_organic_electronics_uk_2008_00001076.asp?rsstopicid=233</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/sid_organic_electronics_uk_2008_00001076.asp?rsstopicid=233</guid><pubDate>22 Sep 2008</pubDate></item>

<item><title>CDT develops organic thin film transistor software model</title><description>In collaboration with Silvaco Data Systems, CDT has developed a model to design and simulate circuits using OTFT (organic thin film transistor) technology.</description><link>http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/cdt_develops_organic_thin_film_transistor_software_model_00001067.asp?rsstopicid=233</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/cdt_develops_organic_thin_film_transistor_software_model_00001067.asp?rsstopicid=233</guid><pubDate>16 Sep 2008</pubDate></item>

<item><title>Better organic semiconductors for printable electronics</title><description>Researchers from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and Seoul National University (SNU) have learned how to tweak a new class of polymer-based semiconductors to better control the location and alignment of the components of the blend.</description><link>http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/better_organic_semiconductors_for_printable_electronics_00001056.asp?rsstopicid=233</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/better_organic_semiconductors_for_printable_electronics_00001056.asp?rsstopicid=233</guid><pubDate>05 Sep 2008</pubDate></item>

<item><title>Organic electronics in Germany getting a huge push forward</title><description>This week, the German ministry for Education and Research BMBF announced the 5 winners in a strategic program which aims to strengthen cooperation between science, research and industry with 200 million Euros over the next 5 years.</description><link>http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/organic_electronics_in_germany_getting_a_huge_push_forward_00001055.asp?rsstopicid=233</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/organic_electronics_in_germany_getting_a_huge_push_forward_00001055.asp?rsstopicid=233</guid><pubDate>04 Sep 2008</pubDate></item>

<item><title>Inorganic FETs on paper</title><description>In Portugal, a new field effect transistor with paper interstrate layer has now been developed.</description><link>http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/inorganic_fets_on_paper_00001008.asp?rsstopicid=233</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/inorganic_fets_on_paper_00001008.asp?rsstopicid=233</guid><pubDate>24 Jul 2008</pubDate></item>

<item><title>Inorganic chemistry used more widely</title><description>Printed electronics today is mainly a matter of inorganic rather than organic chemistry and the next ten years are unlikely to see the inorganic part drop below 50% of the high value materials required.</description><link>http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/inorganic_chemistry_used_more_widely_00000980.asp?rsstopicid=233</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/inorganic_chemistry_used_more_widely_00000980.asp?rsstopicid=233</guid><pubDate>01 Jul 2008</pubDate></item>

<item><title>Sigma-Aldrich signs agreement with Plextronics</title><description>Printed electronics holds possibilities for applications including printed organic solar cells, radio frequency identification (RFID) tags and flexible displays</description><link>http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/sigma_aldrich_signs_agreement_with_plextronics_00000962.asp?rsstopicid=233</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/sigma_aldrich_signs_agreement_with_plextronics_00000962.asp?rsstopicid=233</guid><pubDate>16 Jun 2008</pubDate></item>

<item><title>PV news roundup from the 33rd IEEE PV Event</title><description>Over the last three years significant developments have been made with efficiency of organic based PV cells.</description><link>http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/pv_news_roundup_from_the_33rd_ieee_pv_event_00000928.asp?rsstopicid=233</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/pv_news_roundup_from_the_33rd_ieee_pv_event_00000928.asp?rsstopicid=233</guid><pubDate>21 May 2008</pubDate></item>

<item><title>High permittivity organic transistor gates by ionic drift - Finland/US</title><description>Gate dielectrics in printed electronics can make the transistors exhibit higher current and lower voltage and are a hot area of research.</description><link>http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/high_permittivity_organic_transistor_gates_by_ionic_drift_finland_us_00000895.asp?rsstopicid=233</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/high_permittivity_organic_transistor_gates_by_ionic_drift_finland_us_00000895.asp?rsstopicid=233</guid><pubDate>18 Apr 2008</pubDate></item>

<item><title>Germany pioneering new innovations</title><description>Germany's expertise in industrial production, printing processes, and chemicals - all essential elements to printed electronics - make it a leading location for investments.</description><link>http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/germany_pioneering_new_innovations_00000876.asp?rsstopicid=233</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/germany_pioneering_new_innovations_00000876.asp?rsstopicid=233</guid><pubDate>04 Apr 2008</pubDate></item>

<item><title>OTTI host forum on printed electronics in Germany</title><description>OTTI, the East-Bavarian Technology Transfer Institute, will host an experts' forum on printed electronics 3-4 March in Regensburg, Germany.</description><link>http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/otti_host_forum_on_printed_electronics_in_germany_00000838.asp?rsstopicid=233</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/otti_host_forum_on_printed_electronics_in_germany_00000838.asp?rsstopicid=233</guid><pubDate>01 Mar 2008</pubDate></item>

<item><title>Meeting of MIT RFID SIG 19 Feb USA</title><description>Only RFID offers the electronic printing industry the potential of ten trillion devices yearly, in this case replacing barcodes.</description><link>http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/meeting_of_mit_rfid_sig_19_feb_usa_00000832.asp?rsstopicid=233</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.idtechex.com/research/articles/meeting_of_mit_rfid_sig_19_feb_usa_00000832.asp?rsstopicid=233</guid><pubDate>22 Feb 2008</pubDate></item>

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