Conducting Organic Materials
- 9 November 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 226 (4675) , 651-656
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.226.4675.651
Abstract
Some of the current directions of scientific research on electrically conducting organic solids are reviewed. Both molecular charge transfer salts and polymers are included, with emphasis on the present level of understanding of the novel solid-state properties of these materials in terms of their chemistry and structure. For the charge transfer salts the various types of metal-to-insulator phase transitions which dominate the properties of most of these materials are discussed. Also described are the superconducting and magnetic states which have been found recently. In the case of the polymers the chemistry and physics of the conduction mechanism is examined and contrasted with that of their classical inorganic counterparts.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- New routes to conjugated polymers: 1. A two step route to polyacetylenePolymer, 1984
- A Novel Phase of Organic Conductors: Conducting Polymer SolutionsPublished by American Chemical Society (ACS) ,1984
- Tetramethyltetraselenafulvalenium Perchlorate,Cl, in High Magnetic FieldsPhysical Review Letters, 1983
- Number of Organic Superconductors GrowsScience, 1983
- Polymer Films on Electrodes: 13. Incorporation of Catalysts into Electronically Conductive Polymers: Iron Phthalocyanine in PolypyrroleJournal of the Electrochemical Society, 1983
- Superconductivity in a New Family of Organic ConductorsPhysical Review Letters, 1983
- Magnetic Quantum Oscillations in Tetramethyltetraselenafulvalenium Hexafluorophosphate [P]Physical Review Letters, 1981
- Polymers with Metal‐Like Conductivity—A Review of their Synthesis, Structure and PropertiesAngewandte Chemie International Edition in English, 1981
- Solitons in Polyacetylene: Magnetic SusceptibilityPhysical Review Letters, 1980
- Polysulfur nitride - a metallic, superconducting polymerChemical Reviews, 1979