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Dive into the research topics where Kelly Scott Chichak is active.

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international conference on rfid | 2010

Selective quantitation of vapors and their mixtures using individual passive multivariable RFID sensors

Radislav A. Potyrailo; Cheryl Margaret Surman; William G. Morris; Steven Go; Yongjae Lee; James Anthony Cella; Kelly Scott Chichak

We demonstrate passive (battery-free) radio frequency identification (RFID) devices for selective and sensitive chemical vapor sensing in the presence of ambient interfering gases. We developed two approaches for RFID sensing (1) when a sensing material is applied onto the resonant antenna to alter its impedance response and (2) when a complementary sensor is attached across an antenna and an integrated circuit (IC) memory chip to alter the impedance response of the sensor. In both approaches, these RFID sensors combine several measured parameters of impedance response with the multivariate analysis of these parameters. Thus, these individual sensors provide a unique capability of multiparameter sensing and rejection of environmental interferences. Sensitivity of developed RFID sensors provides detection of vapors at part-per-billion and part-per-million concentrations. Selectivity of developed RFID sensors facilitates selective quantitation of different individual vapors and their mixtures with a single sensor. Our passive RFID sensors were interrogated by the sensor reader at distances ranging from 0 to 33 cm and demonstrated their reliable operation even at the largest tested distance. In our sensing implementations, not the sensor but the sensor reader provides a 16-bit resolution and high signal-to-noise of the acquired signal. Rejection of interferences with a single sensor and the independence from costly proprietary RFID memory chips that have an analog input promise to impact numerous sensing applications.


Archive | 2008

High Efficiency, Illumination Quality OLEDs for Lighting

Joseph John Shiang; James Anthony Cella; Kelly Scott Chichak; Anil Raj Duggal; Kevin H. Janora; Chris Heller; Gautam Parthasarathy; Jeffery Youmans

The goal of the program was to demonstrate a 45 lumen per watt white light device based upon the use of multiple emission colors through the use of solution processing. This performance level is a dramatic extension of the teams previous 15 LPW large area illumination device. The fundamental material system was based upon commercial polymer materials. The team was largely able to achieve these goals, and was able to deliver to DOE a 90 lumen illumination source that had an average performance of 34 LPW a 1000 cd/m{sup 2} with peak performances near 40LPW. The average color temperature is 3200K and the calculated CRI 85. The device operated at a brightness of approximately 1000cd/m{sup 2}. The use of multiple emission colors particularly red and blue, provided additional degrees of design flexibility in achieving white light, but also required the use of a multilayered structure to separate the different recombination zones and prevent interconversion of blue emission to red emission. The use of commercial materials had the advantage that improvements by the chemical manufacturers in charge transport efficiency, operating life and material purity could be rapidly incorporated without the expenditure of additional effort. The program was designed to take maximum advantage of the known characteristics of these material and proceeded in seven steps. (1) Identify the most promising materials, (2) assemble them into multi-layer structures to control excitation and transport within the OLED, (3) identify materials development needs that would optimize performance within multilayer structures, (4) build a prototype that demonstrates the potential entitlement of the novel multilayer OLED architecture (5) integrate all of the developments to find the single best materials set to implement the novel multilayer architecture, (6) further optimize the best materials set, (7) make a large area high illumination quality white OLED. A photo of the final deliverable is shown. In 2003, a large area, OLED based illumination source was demonstrated that could provide light with a quality, quantity, and efficiency on par with what can be achieved with traditional light sources. The demonstration source was made by tiling together 16 separate 6-inch x 6-inch blue-emitting OLEDs. The efficiency, total lumen output, and lifetime of the OLED based illumination source were the same as what would be achieved with an 80 watt incandescent bulb. The devices had an average efficacy of 15 LPW and used solution-processed OLEDs. The individual 6-inch x 6-inch devices incorporated three technology strategies developed specifically for OLED lighting -- downconversion for white light generation, scattering for outcoupling efficiency enhancement, and a scalable monolithic series architecture to enable large area devices. The downconversion approach consists of optically coupling a blue-emitting OLED to a set of luminescent layers. The layers are chosen to absorb the blue OLED emission and then luminescence with high efficiency at longer wavelengths. The composition and number of layers are chosen so that the unabsorbed blue emission and the longer wavelength re-emission combine to make white light. A downconversion approach has the advantage of allowing a wide variety of colors to be made from a limited set of blue emitters. In addition, one does not have to carefully tune the emission wavelength of the individual electro-luminescent species within the OLED device in order to achieve white light. The downconversion architecture used to develop the 15LPW large area light source consisted of a polymer-based blue-emitting OLED and three downconversion layers. Two of the layers utilized perylene based dyes from BASF AG of Germany with high quantum efficiency (>98%) and one of the layers consisted of inorganic phosphor particles (Y(Gd)AG:Ce) with a quantum efficiency of {approx}85%. By independently varying the optical density of the downconversion layers, the overall emission spectrum could be adjusted to maximize performance for lighting (e.g. blackbody temperature, color rendering and luminous efficacy) while keeping the properties of the underlying blue OLED constant. The success of the downconversion approach is ultimately based upon the ability to produce efficient emission in the blue. Table 1 presents a comparison of the current performance of the conjugated polymer, dye-doped polymer, and dendrimer approaches to making a solution-processed blue OLED as 2006. Also given is the published state of the art performance of a vapor-deposited blue OLED. One can see that all the approaches to a blue OLED give approximately the same external quantum efficiency at 500 cd/m{sup 2}. However, due to its low operating voltage, the fluorescent conjugated polymer approach yields a superior power efficiency at the same brightness.


Archive | 2006

Organic iridium compositions and their use in electronic devices

Kelly Scott Chichak; Kyle Erik Litz; James Anthony Cella; Joseph John Shiang; Qing Ye


Archive | 2009

COMPOUND COMPRISING PHENYL PYRIDINE UNITS

Qing Ye; Yangang Liang; Shengxia Liu; Kelly Scott Chichak; Jie Liu


Archive | 2008

Method of Manufacture of a Multi-Layer Phosphorescent Organic Light Emitting Device, and Articles Thereof

Jie Liu; Kelly Scott Chichak; Anil Raj Duggal; Qing Ye


Archive | 2008

Functionalized polyfluorenes for use in optoelectronic devices

Kelly Scott Chichak; Larry Neil Lewis; James Anthony Cella; Joseph John Shiang


Archive | 2012

OLED devices with internal outcoupling

Jie Jerry Liu; Srinivas Prasad Sista; Xiaolei Shi; Rian Zhao; Kelly Scott Chichak; Jeffrey Michael Youmans; Kevin H. Janora; L. G. Turner


Archive | 2006

Electronic devices comprising organic iridium compositions

Kelly Scott Chichak; James Anthony Cella; Kyle Erik Litz; Joseph John Shiang; Qing Ye; Kevin H. Janora; Gautam Parthasarathy


Archive | 2006

Method for preparing polymeric organic iridium compositions

James Anthony Cella; Kelly Scott Chichak


Archive | 2006

Ketopyrroles useful as ligands in organic iridium compositions

Kelly Scott Chichak

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