Cathodic and Anodic Material Diffusion in Polymer/Semiconductor-Nanocrystal Composite Devices

Date

2007-01-01T00:00:00Z

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Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons, Ltd

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

0935-9648

Format

Free to read from

Citation

D. E. Gallardo, C. Bertoni, S. Dunn, N. Gaponik, A. Eychmüller, Cathodic and Anodic Material Diffusion in Polymer/Semiconductor-Nanocrystal Composite Devices, Advanced Materials, Special Issue: Special Section on Bionanotechnology. 2007, 19(20), 3364–3367

Abstract

In the present day, the information technologies and telecommunications sector continually increase their demand for low cost, low power consumption, high performance electroluminescent devices for display applications. Furthermore, general lighting applications, such as white light and large array colour displays, would also benefit from an increase in the overall efficiency. Several technologies are being investigated to fulfill these needs, such as organic light emitting diodes (OLED), polymeric light emitting diodes (PLED) and field effect emission devices. A new and promising technology is light emitting devices (LEDs) based on nanostructured materials. With organic LEDs (OLEDs) already making an impact on the market in an increasingly large number of applications, hybrid technologies based on organic/inorganic nano-composites are a potential the next step. The incorporation of highefficiency fluorescent semiconductor nanoparticles has been shown to have a beneficial effect on device performance, [1] modify the colour output from the device 2 and provide a simplified route to generation of LED type devices. [3]

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

nanoparticle, polymer, composite, LED, nanocrystal, CdTe, diffusion, SIMS, OLED, degradation, PLED, ITO, PDDA, oxide

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