The path to ubiquitous and low-cost organic electronic appliances on plastic
Top Cited Papers
- 1 April 2004
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 428 (6986) , 911-918
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nature02498
Abstract
Organic electronics are beginning to make significant inroads into the commercial world, and if the field continues to progress at its current, rapid pace, electronics based on organic thin-film materials will soon become a mainstay of our technological existence. Already products based on active thin-film organic devices are in the market place, most notably the displays of several mobile electronic appliances. Yet the future holds even greater promise for this technology, with an entirely new generation of ultralow-cost, lightweight and even flexible electronic devices in the offing, which will perform functions traditionally accomplished using much more expensive components based on conventional semiconductor materials such as silicon.Keywords
This publication has 60 references indexed in Scilit:
- Efficient bulk heterojunction photovoltaic cells using small-molecular-weight organic thin filmsNature, 2003
- Highly efficient single-layer dendrimer light-emitting diodes with balanced charge transportApplied Physics Letters, 2003
- Bright electroluminescence from a new conjugated dendrimerSynthetic Metals, 2003
- Effects of film morphology and gate dielectric surface preparation on the electrical characteristics of organic-vapor-phase-deposited pentacene thin-film transistorsApplied Physics Letters, 2002
- Very-high-efficiency double-heterostructure copper phthalocyanine/C60 photovoltaic cellsApplied Physics Letters, 2001
- 2.5% efficient organic plastic solar cellsApplied Physics Letters, 2001
- Polymer phosphorescent light-emitting devices doped with tris(2-phenylpyridine) iridium as a triplet emitterApplied Physics Letters, 2000
- Highly efficient phosphorescent emission from organic electroluminescent devicesNature, 1998
- Laminated fabrication of polymeric photovoltaic diodesNature, 1998
- Pentacene organic thin-film transistors-molecular ordering and mobilityIEEE Electron Device Letters, 1997