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Electrical Characterization of Organic Electronic Materials and Devices
Professor Peter Stallinga (Author)
9780470750094, Wiley
Hardback, published 9 October 2009
320 pages
23.6 x 15.8 x 2.3 cm, 0.581 kg
Think like an electron Organic electronic materials have many applications and potential in low-cost electronics such as electronic barcodes and in light emitting devices, due to their easily tailored properties. While the chemical aspects and characterization have been widely studied, characterization of the electrical properties has been neglected, and classic textbook modeling has been applied. This is most striking in the analysis of thin-film transistors (TFTs) using thick “bulk” transistor (MOS-FET) descriptions. At first glance the TFTs appear to behave as regular MOS-FETs. However, upon closer examination it is clear that TFTs are unique and merit their own model. Understanding and interpreting measurements of organic devices, which are often seen as black-box measurements, is critical to developing better devices and this, therefore, has to be done with care. Electrical Characterization of Organic Electronic Materials and Devices
Preface. 1 General concepts. 1.1 Introduction. 1.2 Conduction mechanism. 1.3 Chemistry and the energy diagram. 1.4 Disordered materials and the Meyer–Neldel Rule. 1.5 Devices. 1.6 Optoelectronics/photovoltaics. 2 Two-terminal devices: DC current. 2.1 Conductance. 2.2 DC current of a Schottky barrier. 2.3 DC measurements. 3 Two-terminal devices: Admittance spectroscopy. 3.1 Admittance spectroscopy. 3.2 Geometrical capacitance. 3.3 Equivalent circuits. 3.4 Resistor; SCLC. 3.5 Schottky diodes. 3.6 MIS diodes. 3.7 MIS tunnel diode. 3.8 Noise measurements. 4 Two-terminal devices: Transient techniques. 4.1 Kinetics: Emission and capture of carriers. 4.2 Current transient spectroscopy. 4.3 Thermally stimulated current. 4.4 Capacitance transient spectroscopy. 4.5 Deep-level transient spectroscopy. 4.6 Q-DLTS. 5 Time-of-flight. 5.1 Introduction. 5.2 Drift transient. 5.3 Diffusive transient. 5.4 Violating einstein’s relation. 5.5 Multi-trap-and-release. 5.6 Anomalous transients. 5.7 High current (space charge) transients. 5.8 Summary of the ToF technique. 6 Thin-film transistors. 6.1 Field-effect transistors. 6.2 MOS-FET. 6.3 Introducing TFTs. 6.4 Basic model. 6.5 Justification for the two-dimensional approach. 6.6 Ambipolar materials and devices. 6.7 Contact effects and other simple nonidealities. 6.8 Metallic contacts in TFTs. 6.9 Normally-on TFTs. 6.10 Effects of traps. 6.11 Admittance spectroscopy for the determination of the mobility in TFTs. 6.12 Summary of TFT measurements. 6.13 Diffusion transistor. Appendix A A Derivation of Equations (2.21), (2.25), (6.95) and (6.101). Bibliography. Index.
Subject Areas: Mechanical engineering & materials [TG]
