Thomas D. Anthopoulos
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
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Featured researches published by Thomas D. Anthopoulos.
Nature Materials | 2008
Mariano Campoy-Quiles; Toby A. M. Ferenczi; Tiziano Agostinelli; Pablo G. Etchegoin; Youngkyoo Kim; Thomas D. Anthopoulos; Paul N. Stavrinou; Donal D. C. Bradley; Jenny Nelson
Control of blend morphology at the microscopic scale is critical for optimizing the power conversion efficiency of plastic solar cells based on blends of conjugated polymer with fullerene derivatives. In the case of bulk heterojunctions of regioregular poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) and a soluble fullerene derivative ([6,6]-phenyl C61-butyric acid methyl ester, PCBM), both blend morphology and photovoltaic device performance are influenced by various treatments, including choice of solvent, rate of drying, thermal annealing and vapour annealing. Although the protocols differ significantly, the maximum power conversion efficiency values reported for the various techniques are comparable (4-5%). In this paper, we demonstrate that these techniques all lead to a common arrangement of the components, which consists of a vertically and laterally phase-separated blend of crystalline P3HT and PCBM. We propose a morphology evolution that consists of an initial crystallization of P3HT chains, followed by diffusion of PCBM molecules to nucleation sites, at which aggregates of PCBM then grow.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Hugo Bronstein; Zhuoying Chen; Raja Shahid Ashraf; Weimin Zhang; Junping Du; James R. Durrant; Pabitra Shakya Tuladhar; Kigook Song; Scott E. Watkins; Yves Geerts; Mm Martijn Wienk; René A. J. Janssen; Thomas D. Anthopoulos; Henning Sirringhaus; Martin Heeney; Iain McCulloch
We report the synthesis and polymerization of a novel thieno[3,2-b]thiophene-diketopyrrolopyrrole-based monomer. Copolymerization with thiophene afforded a polymer with a maximum hole mobility of 1.95 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1), which is the highest mobility from a polymer-based OFET reported to date. Bulk-heterojunction solar cells comprising this polymer and PC(71)BM gave a power conversion efficiency of 5.4%.
Advanced Materials | 2012
Zhuoying Chen; Mi Jung Lee; Raja Shahid Ashraf; Yun Gu; Sebastian Albert-Seifried; Martin Meedom Nielsen; Bob C. Schroeder; Thomas D. Anthopoulos; Martin Heeney; Iain McCulloch; Henning Sirringhaus
Ambipolar OFETs with balanced hole and electron field-effect mobilities both exceeding 1 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1) are achieved based on a single-solution-processed conjugated polymer, DPPT-TT, upon careful optimization of the device architecture, charge injection, and polymer processing. Such high-performance OFETs are promising for applications in ambipolar devices and integrated circuits, as well as model systems for fundamental studies.
Advanced Materials | 2010
Gerwin H. Gelinck; Paul Heremans; Kazumasa Nomoto; Thomas D. Anthopoulos
Organic thin-film transistors (OTFTs) offer unprecedented opportunities for implementation in a broad range of technological applications spanning from large-volume microelectronics and optical displays to chemical and biological sensors. In this Progress Report, we review the application of organic transistors in the fields of flexible optical displays and microelectronics. The advantages associated with the use of OTFT technology are discussed with primary emphasis on the latest developments in the area of active-matrix electrophoretic and organic light-emitting diode displays based on OTFT backplanes and on the application of organic transistors in microelectronics including digital and analog circuits.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
Weimin Zhang; Jeremy C. Smith; Scott E. Watkins; Roman Gysel; Michael D. McGehee; Alberto Salleo; James Kirkpatrick; Shahid Ashraf; Thomas D. Anthopoulos; Martin Heeney; Iain McCulloch
High-performance, solution-processed transistors fabricated from semiconducting polymers containing indacenodithiohene repeat units are described. The bridging functions on the backbone contribute to suppressing large-scale crystallization in thin films. However, charge carrier mobilities of up to 1 cm(2)/(V s) for a benzothiadiazole copolymer were reported and, coupled with both ambient stability and long-wavelength absorption, make this family of polymers particularly attractive for application in next-generation organic optoelectronics.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Xinran Zhang; Lee J. Richter; Dean M. DeLongchamp; R. Joseph Kline; Matthew R. Hammond; Iain McCulloch; Martin Heeney; Raja Shahid Ashraf; Jeremy Smith; Thomas D. Anthopoulos; Bob C. Schroeder; Yves Geerts; Daniel A. Fischer; Michael F. Toney
We describe a series of highly soluble diketo pyrrolo-pyrrole (DPP)-bithiophene copolymers exhibiting field effect hole mobilities up to 0.74 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1), with a common synthetic motif of bulky 2-octyldodecyl side groups on the conjugated backbone. Spectroscopy, diffraction, and microscopy measurements reveal a transition in molecular packing behavior from a preferentially edge-on orientation of the conjugated plane to a preferentially face-on orientation as the attachment density of the side chains increases. Thermal annealing generally reduces both the face-on population and the misoriented edge-on domains. The highest hole mobilities of this series were obtained from edge-on molecular packing and in-plane liquid-crystalline texture, but films with a bimodal orientation distribution and no discernible in-plane texture exhibited surprisingly comparable mobilities. The high hole mobility may therefore arise from the molecular packing feature common to the entire polymer series: backbones that are strictly oriented parallel to the substrate plane and coplanar with other backbones in the same layer.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012
Catherine Kanimozhi; Nir Yaacobi-Gross; Kang Wei Chou; Aram Amassian; Thomas D. Anthopoulos; Satish Patil
In this communication, we report the synthesis of a novel diketopyrrolopyrrole-diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP-DPP)-based conjugated copolymer and its application in high-mobility organic field-effect transistors. Copolymerization of DPP with DPP yields a copolymer with exceptional properties such as extended absorption characteristics (up to ~1100 nm) and field-effect electron mobility values of >1 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1). The synthesis of this novel DPP-DPP copolymer in combination with the demonstration of transistors with extremely high electron mobility makes this work an important step toward a new family of DPP-DPP copolymers for application in the general area of organic optoelectronics.
Nature Communications | 2013
Xinran Zhang; Hugo Bronstein; Auke J. Kronemeijer; Jeremy C. Smith; Youngju Kim; R. Joseph Kline; Lee J. Richter; Thomas D. Anthopoulos; Henning Sirringhaus; Kigook Song; Martin Heeney; Weimin Zhang; Iain McCulloch; Dean M. DeLongchamp
One of the most inspiring and puzzling developments in the organic electronics community in the last few years has been the emergence of solution-processable semiconducting polymers that lack significant long-range order but outperform the best, high-mobility, ordered semiconducting polymers to date. Here we provide new insights into the charge-transport mechanism in semiconducting polymers and offer new molecular design guidelines by examining a state-of-the-art indacenodithiophene-benzothiadiazole copolymer having field-effect mobility of up to 3.6 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1) with a combination of diffraction and polarizing spectroscopic techniques. Our results reveal that its conjugated planes exhibit a common, comprehensive orientation in both the non-crystalline regions and the ordered crystallites, which is likely to originate from its superior backbone rigidity. We argue that charge transport in high-mobility semiconducting polymers is quasi one-dimensional, that is, predominantly occurring along the backbone, and requires only occasional intermolecular hopping through short π-stacking bridges.
Applied Physics Letters | 2006
Thomas D. Anthopoulos; Birendra Singh; Nenad Marjanovic; Niyazi Serdar Sariciftci; Alberto Montaigne Ramil; H. Sitter; Michael Cölle; Dago M. de Leeuw
We report on organic n-channel field-effect transistors and circuits based on C60 films grown by hot wall epitaxy. Electron mobility is found to be dependent strongly on the substrate temperature during film growth and on the type of the gate dielectric employed. Top-contact transistors employing LiF∕Al electrodes and a polymer dielectric exhibit maximum electron mobility of 6cm2∕Vs. When the same films are employed in bottom-contact transistors, using SiO2 as gate dielectric, mobility is reduced to 0.2cm2∕Vs. By integrating several transistors we are able to fabricate high performance unipolar (n-channel) ring oscillators with stage delay of 2.3μs.
Advanced Materials | 2012
Jeremy Smith; Weimin Zhang; Rachid Sougrat; Kui Zhao; Ruipeng Li; Dongkyu Cha; Aram Amassian; Martin Heeney; Iain McCulloch; Thomas D. Anthopoulos
Using phase-separated organic semiconducting blends containing a small molecule, as the hole transporting material, and a conjugated amorphous polymer, as the binder material, we demonstrate solution-processed organic thin-film transistors with superior performance characteristics that include; hole mobility >5 cm(2) /Vs, current on/off ratio ≥10(6) and narrow transistor parameter spread. These exceptional characteristics are attributed to the electronic properties of the binder polymer and the advantageous nanomorphology of the blend film.
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Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
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